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View Full Version : Canon announces development of a 200-400/4 with in-built extender



Xenedis
07-02-2011, 4:30pm
Yes, you read it right.

Canon has announced it is developing the EF 200-400mm f/4L IS USM Extender 1.4x lens.

More here:

http://www.dpreview.com/news/1102/11020708canon200400mm.asp
http://www.canon.com/news/2011/feb07e.html

The in-built extender turns the lens into a 280-560/5.6. I can see this lens being enormously popular for sports and wildlife photographers.

Art Vandelay
07-02-2011, 4:38pm
That sounds like a good proposition. interesting with a built in 1.4 converter. Look forward to seeing it in action.

Xenedis
07-02-2011, 4:40pm
Nikon has had a 200-400/4 for years. It's interesting to see that Canon has finally responded to that. :-)

Canon's closest equivalent is the 100-400/4.5-5.6, which, while 100mm wider at the wide end, is slower and has a variable aperture.

wolffman
07-02-2011, 5:05pm
Interesting lens design. It looks like the tc slides into the bulge at the back of the lens to clear the optic path to sensor. It must have a little motor to move it in and out.

fabian628
07-02-2011, 6:15pm
very interesting lens indeed!
Once again canon surprises us :D

mrDooba
07-02-2011, 6:36pm
Cool! That could be a nice BIF lens! It's due out this year too!!!

I wonder if it has internal zoom like the 70-200s?

etherial
07-02-2011, 6:41pm
I'm looking forward to this one, might be just what I'm after.

carrg1954
07-02-2011, 7:15pm
Due later in 2011 may also mean sometime 2012, manufacturers are tending to announce early and have a lengthy delay before real deliveries begin.
Price wise with a 200-400 nikon abount 7k, who wants to guess what the target pricing for canon will be.

conscuba
07-02-2011, 10:45pm
$6999.99 . my guess

Xenedis
07-02-2011, 10:53pm
$6999.99 . my guess

Nikon's 200-400/4 is considerably more expensive, and given the Canon version will include a 1.4x extender in the design, I'd expect the RRP to be higher than $7K.

strictfunctor
07-02-2011, 11:58pm
I'd be astonished if it was anywhere near $7K, if they actually expected to sell any.

Xenedis
08-02-2011, 5:28am
I'd be astonished if it was anywhere near $7K, if they actually expected to sell any.

Check out the price of the Nikkor 200-400/4 some time.

Don't make the mistake of assuming that because a lens like this is well outside the budget of many people, that it won't sell well within its intended market segment.

We're talking about a fairly specialised lens here.

Having the 400mm focal length a speed faster than f/5.6 is a seriously expensive exercise.

Currently, the only way to do that with Canon's current offerings is to buy a 300/2.8L IS and 1.4x TC, or a 400/4 DO IS, or a 400/2.8L IS, with all of those options being very expensive.

Even the price difference between a 300/4 and 300/2.8 is staggering.

kiwi
08-02-2011, 7:07am
Canon long lens prices are typically 20% less than nikon :rolleyes:

Looks interesting design

Maybe next out will be a canon d3 ?

Analog6
08-02-2011, 7:21am
Looks very tempting - the price will be the big factor.

Gollum
08-02-2011, 8:12am
I think that there is an important principle to note here. The TC function is part of the lens design, it is not an add on. This should mean that there is improved performance from the lens:).

I was originally going to buy a 70-200 f2.8 and a 400 f5.6 so I had everything covered. The only problem was the 400mm had no IS. Then I changed my mind and decided to get a 70-300L, and hope that they would introduce a TC for it. Now what do I buy, do I wait and see how good the 200-400 will be?

There are times when I can hate Canon for doing things like this:(.

I look forward to seeing a price.

PS: I think this means the end of the 100-400

DNA
08-02-2011, 3:07pm
It will most likely be over the 10k mark. Way too new technology and Canon will surely charge a mint! :)

Xenedis
08-02-2011, 3:49pm
PS: I think this means the end of the 100-400

Not necessarily.

The focal range is somewhat similar, but that's where the similarities end.

The 200-400/4 is bigger and heavier, will be far more expensive, has a constant aperture, and a faster (for 400mm) aperture of f/4.

The 100-400 is slower, lighter, a lot smaller, far less expensive, and has a variable aperture.

By dropping the 100-400, Canon would effectively isolate the type of customer who wants 400mm of reach at a more affordable price.

In as much as Canon is catering for different markets by offering 70-200s with f/4 and f/2.8 (and an IS version of each), I suspect Canon will continue to serve with the 100-400 a market which cannot afford the 200-400.

Xenedis
08-02-2011, 3:55pm
It will most likely be over the 10k mark. Way too new technology and Canon will surely charge a mint! :)

It will be interesting to see if the new technology pushes the price up.

Years ago, Canon invested in diffractive optics (DO) technology and released only two lenses which featured it:


a 400/4 IS; and
yet another slow, variable-aperture 70-300.

Both were and are over-priced for what they are, and it seems that Canon hasn't bothered with DO since.

I wonder how much R&D went into the in-built tele-converter...

Gollum
08-02-2011, 5:01pm
Xenedis

The 100-400 is still priced around the $2,000 mark, although I understand that it’s now being discounted overseas (sourced from CR). The new 70-300L f4-5.6 is around $1,900 and is smaller (by 40mm) and lighter (by 0.2Kgs). This lens is even lighter than the 300 f4 IS prime. The 70-300 is also a much better lens in both speed and optics when compared to the 100-400. So the only reasons to pick the 100-400 are the extra 100 and TC compatibility.

When Canon recently updated their prime lens, much to everybody’s surprise, they were all lighter (some by Kgs). I wouldn’t assume that this lens would be as heavy as many are suggesting. My guess is a certainly <3kgs

If you think carefully about the integrated 1.4TC, you will realise the huge change this will make. A 1.4TC adds 7 lens in 3 groups, that’s a lot of extra optics. My guess would be that this functionality was added by moving lens elements. This should mean that the lens will be lighter and cheaper.

I don’t know how much it cost Canon develop IS, but I feel it was money well spent.

DNA

As for the $10,000 price tag, this wound place it in the 600 IS prime market, that’s not going to happen. If I were to guess, it would be around $3,000 mark (This may be wishful thinking because the Nikon is $6,000).

Xenedis
08-02-2011, 5:17pm
When Canon recently updated their prime lens, much to everybody’s surprise, they were all lighter (some by Kgs). I wouldn’t assume that this lens would be as heavy as many are suggesting. My guess is a certainly <2kgs

I seriously doubt that. Consider the physics. A 400mm f/4 lens will have an objective element of 10cm in diameter. The objective element is similar in size to that of a 300/2.8. Even the new 300/2.8L IS II weighs 2.4kg, only a very marginal decrease from the 300/2.8L IS (I have that one, and know its weight well).

Zooms tend to have more elements than primes, so that's going to add weight too. You've got a large, thick objective element, a fair amount of other glass, plus the optics of the tele-extender. Sub-2kg doesn't seem plausible to me.


If you think carefully about the integrated 1.4TC, you will realise the huge change this will make. A 1.4TC adds 7 lens in 3 groups, that’s a lot of extra optics.

And weight.


As for the $10,000 price tag, this wound place it in the 600 IS prime market, that’s not going to happen. If I were to guess, it would be around $3,000 mark.

That's not going to happen either. Was that '3' a typo?

An L-series 200-400/4 is just not going to be that cheap no matter how much you wish, and it's certainly not going to be offered at an RRP lower than that of the 70-200/2.8L IS II.

Roosta
08-02-2011, 5:26pm
Check out the price of the Nikkor 200-400/4 some time.

Don't make the mistake of assuming that because a lens like this is well outside the budget of many people, that it won't sell well within its intended market segment.

We're talking about a fairly specialised lens here.

Having the 400mm focal length a speed faster than f/5.6 is a seriously expensive exercise.

Currently, the only way to do that with Canon's current offerings is to buy a 300/2.8L IS and 1.4x TC, or a 400/4 DO IS, or a 400/2.8L IS, with all of those options being very expensive.

Even the price difference between a 300/4 and 300/2.8 is staggering.

With you on pricing, except, the price of the 300mm F4 is rapidily dropping, given the F2.8 is, as you mentioned not cheap, the F4 is around $1600, check out Quality Camera Sales.

The 200-400 is mouth watering, but I feel it is going to be in the as you say Xenedes speciality market price range, they'll shell shed loads of em, me thinks.

Gollum
08-02-2011, 5:37pm
Sorry Xenedis

You are correct about the weight is was supposed to be <3kgs.

I forgot to put in the price punch line before I posted.

Have corrected both errors in the original post (must do more poof reading)

Thanks again

Scotty72
08-02-2011, 5:39pm
This is just marketing hype.

Surely a 200-400 with built in 1.4 TC is just a 280-560.

Just sounds more wow in the glossy brochure.

swifty
08-02-2011, 5:49pm
The built in TC certainly would be interesting.
From a handling POV I wonder how it compare to say, a 200-560 f4-5.6 where the cross over aperture occurs around the 400mm mark.
I don't really use teles much but I'd imagine there's nothing gained inthe 200-400 range with the TC. But at a flick of a switch it's an instant 560mm f5.6...very cool. But to get to the 400-560 range you'd then need to zoom back again??!!
Hence my comparison to a theoretical 200-560 f4-5.6.
But I guess there're a lot of unknowns here eg.
How much bigger/heavier is a 200-400 f4 with TC compared to non-TC
How much bigger/heavier would a theoretical 200-560 f4-5.6 be compared to a 200-400 f4 TC
How good is the iq from 400-560 in the built-in TC lens compare to a 200-560 in the same range.
How good is it in the 200-400 range without the use of TC compared to the non-TC.

carrg1954
08-02-2011, 6:30pm
This might be of interest , pricing makes good sence and I can still buy a new d700 and nikkor 200-400 for $9k or there abouts.
http://dancarrphotography.com/blog/2011/02/07/the-ultimate-wildlife-lens-bird-canon-200-400-f4-l-is-usm-extender-1-4%C3%97/

mrDooba
08-02-2011, 8:08pm
Here's a BIG pic of the beastie.
http://a.img-dpreview.com/news/1102/canon/lenses/EF-200-400mm-f4L-IS-USM-EXTENDER-1.4.jpg

pmack
08-02-2011, 10:37pm
judging by the images, and the size of the tripod mount, it's position suggesting the lens is very front heavy, i'd guess this lens will be a good 3kg.
the nikkor 200-400 is 3.2kg. this lens has the additional TC in it, but it is newer and optics are getting lighter, so 3kg is a good ballpark guess
i don't reckon they'll get rid of the 100-400, maybe they'll update it instead?
It's been such a winner for canon, i doubt they will get rid of it without a direct or very simillar replacement. this is not it

DNA
09-02-2011, 11:53am
DNA

As for the $10,000 price tag, this wound place it in the 600 IS prime market, that’s not going to happen. If I were to guess, it would be around $3,000 mark (This may be wishful thinking because the Nikon is $6,000).

Now the US price of the new 600/4L MkII is around $11,990. By the time it lands here it will be more like AUD14,000. I am pretty sure the 200-400 f/4L with the built-in TC will not leave you much change from AUD10,000. ;) But time will tell.

kiwi
09-02-2011, 12:59pm
Ill bet you it will be less than Nikon's equivalent.:)

Xenedis
09-02-2011, 3:25pm
You are correct about the weight is was supposed to be <3kgs.

3kg sounds reasonable.

However, there's still no way that the price tag will be in the vicinity of $3K.

mikspics
09-02-2011, 10:06pm
Here's a BIG pic of the beastie.
http://a.img-dpreview.com/news/1102/canon/lenses/EF-200-400mm-f4L-IS-USM-EXTENDER-1.4.jpg

nice shot of this jigger showing the arm and lock for the tc....? looks like a manual setup just flick the lever down and lock it in........brilliant.
8k -8.5k.

Gollum
10-02-2011, 5:04am
Some expert analysis of this new lens and how it may work

http://www.the-digital-picture.com/Reviews/Canon-EF-200-400mm-f-4-L-IS-USM-Extender-1.4x-Lens-Review.aspx

From what he is saying the TC elements are moved out (or in) when not in use.

DanNG
10-02-2011, 6:28pm
I want one :cool:

in2fx
10-02-2011, 7:35pm
Probably a really nice lens, but looks very expensive

twister
11-02-2011, 10:05pm
Finally us Canonites get something to not just match, but exceed its Nikon counterpart...

Now that Canon has the 70-200 revamped and 200-400 announced, it's about time they put the same optical prowess into the 24-70 as well...that will effectively complete the constant-aperture zoom series (barring the UWAs) all the way from 24mm to 400mm...

wattsgallery
22-02-2011, 1:02pm
Really looking forward to this lens. Dont suppose I will have the cash to buy it outright but as a hired/borrowed lens for safari shoots it will be fantastic. The 100-400 is a default but it never feels as good as the 200-400 Nik so finally we have something to compete.