Email me at midwesternmeso (AT) hotmail [DOT] com

Please note: All images and videos on this blog are copyrighted by myself and may not be used without written permission. Any persons or entities who do not seek written permission will be held liable for copyright infringement(s) and will be subject to monetary compensation not to exceed $150,000 USD. (In pursuant to 17 USC Section 504(b) and (c), 17 USC Section 505.)

Sunday, January 07, 2007

17-40

What a shitty lens......(or at least mine is). Very soft on the left side, and I swear that my KIT lens is sharper. Needless to say, I'm sending it back for the Sigma 17-70 f2.8, which is what I should have bought in the first place. I'm also picking up the Sigma 10-20.

Couple of Sample shots from the 17-40 are below. It lacks great color and sharpness, which is what the "L" series is supposed to be about. Darin and Mike Parker both have the 17-70, and the pics are night and day. Parker showed me some comparisons between the two, and the Sigma wins in a blowout. At a price of only $349, after you enter the secret code at bh ;), I have to pick it up, along with the 10-20.

I also have a telephoto on the way (A cheap Sigma 75-300). So hopefully I can share some photos on here in the upcoming weeks.

Spring needs to hurry up.





3 comments:

Steve Miller said...

Thanks for the commentary. I have been lens shopping for about a month now and information like this is very helpful.

DM said...

Yeah, I don't know what is up with Canon, but their quality control is HORRIBLE. I'm not the only one with a soft copy recently. For nearly the same price, you can get the sigma 17-70 2.8 (wayyyyy better for low light than the f4 on the 17-40), AND a Sigma 10-20 UWA. Both very SHARP lenses. Darin has some GREAT examples of the 17-70 on www.tornadolive.com . I agree with others that Sigma owns the wide angles, and Canon owns the telephotos.

Anonymous said...

Hello there,

after purchasing the 17-40 L (my first L class lens) I ran some test (newspaper test and real life test) at various aperture (5.4, 7.1, 9.0) and focal length (17mm, 28mm, 40mm) between the 17-40 L and the 18-55 EF-S from the Rebel XT kit.

I was very disappointed by the 17-40. At 17mm the center sharpness was the same as the kit lens on the edges and the corners....the kit was better.

At 28mm and 40mm the 17-40 has an edge....except in the corner where the kit lens is as good or better.

The color is obviously better with the 17-40 and the contrast as well. However I found the 17-40 to have too much contrast to my taste. Contrast can be easily added in post processing...it is hard to remove without adding noise.

I was interested in this lens because it has the full frame compatibility. However after seeing the sharpness at the borders and corners on the APS-C format I clearly don't think it will be good in the corners of a FF sensor!!!!

So for a $700 lens I have to say that I was expecting better. I ended up like you...returning it to the store and taking the Sigma 17-70.

I ran the same tests...the sigma shows more consistency across the frame. The 17mm is the weak spot like the 17-40, however the sharpness from 22mm is better than the kit lens. All that for half the price of the 17-40. Only one remark, the color are a bit warm with the 17-70 where they were accurate with the 17-70.

Chromatic aberrations are virtually the same on the 17-40 and 17-70...way better than the kit lens.

I still consider the "L" class lenses from Canon. Beside the construction quality of the 17-40, I don't see why Canon put that lens in that class. Optical Quality is not there.

Regards,

Laurent

Contact Me

Contact me @
midwesternmeso AT hotmail (DOT) COM

wibiya widget