Reddit Reddit reviews Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM Super Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

We found 4 Reddit comments about Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM Super Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Digital Camera Lenses
Electronics
Camcorder & Camera Lenses
Camera & Photo
Camera Lenses
Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM Super Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
Lens construction: 7 elements in 6 groups.Focus Adjustment: Inner focusing system with USMDiagonal Angle of View: 6° 10' .Fluorite and Ultra-low Dispersion-glass; internal focusing; full-time manual focusClosest Focusing Distance: 35m / 115 ftFocal Length & Maximum Aperture: 400mm 1:56Filter size: 77mm
Check price on Amazon

4 Reddit comments about Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L USM Super Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras:

u/admiraljohn · 7 pointsr/PictureChallenge

This also might not be a bad time for us to tell everyone a bit more about ourselves.

I live in upstate New York with my wife and our son. I've been a photographer for about 3 years and my main area of interest is aviation photography. I shoot with Canons, mainly because my Dad does as well, and this not only allows me to get the advice of a photographer with 40+ years experience, but it also allows me to benefit from his hand-me-down gear, which last year happened to be this lens. :)

u/jnecr · 1 pointr/BirdPhotography

> we cant even begin to suggest that price is comparable.

Not sure what you mean there. The Canon is usually a little cheaper on the used market since they've been making the same lens for 20+ years there's a lot of really nice ones available.

Even new the prices are quite similar.

Sigma - $989

Canon - $1149

u/byParallax · 1 pointr/spaceporn

Specs -

Celestron Advanced VX (available on Amazon).

Canon EF 400mm f/5.6L (available on Amazon).

 

Credits -

Created by Mike Hollingshead for his website stormandsky.com

http://stormandsky.com/sky-tracker

u/Jaspyprancer · 1 pointr/nononono

It isn't that a smaller sensor magnifies the image more. It's that the smaller sensor is capturing and resolving a smaller section of the entire image projected by the lens. This is a good illustration of it. Say the entire circle is the image projected by the lens. The black square would be the 5D's full frame sensor, while the red square is the 7D's crop sensor. It isn't magnifying the image, it's just capturing a smaller portion of the projected image as a whole. It creates the illusion of more magnification, when in reality, it's just resolving a smaller portion of the projected image as a whole.

The concept of a divergent lens between the lens and the camera's sensor is illustrated by teleconverters. I shoot Canon, so I'm going to stick with their equipment for my examples. Canon makes a 1.4x teleconverter, and a 2x teleconverter for their cameras. These apply a multiplicative factor to compatible lenses (usually Canon's L series lenses). So, with a 2x teleconverter, a 300mm lens on a full frame sensor would become a 600mm lens. Unfortunately, these teleconverters reduce a lenses' widest possible aperture. The 1.4x reduces the maximum aperture by 1.5 stops, and the 2x reduces maximum aperture by 2 stops. This becomes really limiting in anything but very bright light, because realistically, your minimum shutter speed should be the reciprocal of your focal length in order to eliminate camera shake. So, if you're using a 600mm lens, you should be shooting at at least 1/600. So, let's expand on this. This is the longest lens I own. It's a 300mm f/4 L, compatible with my 2x teleconverter. With the teleconverter, it becomes a 600mm f/8 lens, on a full frame camera. So, without taking image stabilization into consideration, your minimum settings will be 1/600 at f/8. ISO, or sensor sensitivity, can certainly make up for this. However, it's also important to understand that adding this teleconverter has added distortion, and is degrading overall image quality. Additionally, most modern cameras can only autofocus with a lens that has a widest aperture of f/5.6 or lower. Off the top of my head, the only exception to this that I know of is Canon's 1D-X, their flagship model. So, it isn't that it's impossible to generate fairly long focal lengths on a moderate budget, but image quality and overall capability are going to suffer from doing so. Canon's longest lens that is under $10,000 is the 400mm f/5.6 L. There are versions of the 300mm and 400mm lenses with wider maximum apertures, but those are also extremely expensive. So yes, overall, this is very possible, but to do it effectively, it would be extremely expensive.


As for the idea of adding a close up filter, those don't really magnify an image too much. They really just magnify it in such a way that a plane of critical focus can be achieved at less distance than you would usually be able to achieve it with a lens. Additionally, they add a considerable amount of distortion and degradation of image quality. This is something to consider any time you add an element between the photographic subject and the sensor itself. Every layer of glass will degrade image quality to a certain extent. Some lenses are made and treated in such a way that it reduces image quality significantly less than others. Again though, glass that nice is usually pretty expensive.