Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

Below is a simplified summary of the formal findings. The chart shows line widths per picture height (LW/PH) which can be taken as a measure for sharpness. If you want to know more about the MTF50 figures you may check out the corresponding Imatest Explanations

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

MTF (resolution) at 21 megapixels

Many users are still using cameras with a more moderate pixel count so let's have a look how the lens performs with the eased requirements at 21 megapixels - also in order to be able to compare the results to older reviews.

Unsurprisingly the results are "better" still on pixel level because the pixel density is lower. Generally the quality is just outstanding and a tad higher than on the mk I at longer focal lengths.

Please note that the MTF results are not directly comparable across the different systems!

Below is a simplified summary of the formal findings. The chart shows line widths per picture height (LW/PH) which can be taken as a measure for sharpness. If you want to know more about the MTF50 figures you may check out the corresponding Imatest Explanations

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

Chromatic Aberrations (CAs)

Lateral chromatic aberrations (color shadows at the image borders) are very low. At 70mm, they vary around the 1.1px mark at the image borders. CAs are at their lowest (negligible) level in the middle range and increase just slightly again towards the 200mm end.

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

PS: The CA figures were taken at 50 megapixels.

Bokeh

Due to its max aperture of f/4, the Canon lens isn't perfectly aligned to shallow depth-of-field photography but it is, of course, capable of doing so if you stick to fairly short focus distances.

Near-center highlights are nicely circular at f/4 up to f/8. The inner highlight zone is pretty smooth with minimal outlining at the highlight edge.

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

The circular highlights deteriorate to the usual "cat eyes" the more you move to the image corners (see below at f/4). Stopping down helps with this albeit from a real-life perspective you won't really do so due to the small max aperture anyway.

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

When looking at the general quality of the blur in the focus transition zone, it's very smooth in the image foreground (to the right). The image background (left) shows is somewhat rougher though.

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

Here's a snap from the real world showing the background:

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

Sample Images

Sorry, no sample images this time. Mr. Lumbago paid a visit (...).

Competition

There is a variety of alternatives out there. You should still be able to shop for the mk I for a while and even the ancient Canon EF 70-200mm f/4 USM L (without image stabilizer) is still available here and there - and that's an oldie but goodie as well at a much lower price point. As far as current production lenses are concerned, the most obvious competitor is the new Tamon 70-210mm f/4 Di VC USD. We haven't tested this lens yet but Tamron doesn't classify it as an "SP" lens - their professional grade lineup - so it is very unlikely that it can touch the Canon EF 70-200mm f/4 USM L IS II really. However, it is also much cheaper at just 800USD/EUR. An option that may produce more headaches regarding your preference may be the Tamron SP 70-200mm f/2.8 DI VC USD G2. We haven't tested this one either but that one is certainly a serious lens and it resides at the same price point as the Canon lens but it is one stop faster. However, as it goes with f/2.8 lenses, it is also much bigger and heavier.

Đánh giá 70 200 is f4

Visual comparison courtesy of camerasize.com.

Verdict

The king is dead and, yes, long live the new king. The Canon EF 70-200mm f/4 USM L IS II is everything that the mk I was plus some. It is the perfect playmate for ultra-resolution Canon cameras. It is mostly tack sharp at mainstream settings with no real weakness across the focal length range. Lateral CAs are low and not really an issue. Image distortions can be visible specifically at the long end though and you can spot some moderate vignetting at f/4. If you use digital auto-correction that will be a lesser concern, of course. The quality of the bokeh is Okay for a zoom lens but it has its shortcomings.

The build quality is excellent but that's hardly a surprise when talking about a Canon L lens. The low weight and small size are certainly welcomed when carrying around your camera gear all day long. Canon's improved image stabilizer is impressive. Funnily the EF 70-200mm f/4 USM L IS II is at least as good as EF 70-200mm f/2.8 USM L IS III regarding low light photography because the latter's IS delivers a gain of 3.5 f-stops vs 5 f-stops for the f/4 lens - that is in static scenes. The ring-type USM is fast - as usual - but it doesn't seems to have improved over the mk I lens.

So the final question is whether you have to buy one? :-) If you want the ultimate in image quality from a medium tele-zoom lens - maybe. However, you have to live with the moderate max. aperture of f/4. Whether this is a real limitation for you is something only you can answer. The price tag is fairly hefty but then it is aligned to the delivered quality. Therefore - highly recommended!