Canon EF-S 17-85mm 1:4-5.6 IS USM review
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Street price | • US: $520 • UK: £360 |
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Date introduced | August 2004 |
Maximum format size | APS-C |
Focal length | 17-85mm |
35mm equivalent focal length (APS-C) |
27-136mm |
Diagonal Angle of view (APS-C) |
78º - 18º |
Maximum aperture | F4-5.6 |
Minimum aperture | F22-32 |
Lens Construction |
• 17 elements/12 groups |
Number of diaphragm blades |
6 |
Minimum focus | 0.35m |
Maximum magnification |
0.20x at 85mm |
AF motor type | • Ring-type Ultrasonic Motor • Full-time manual focus |
Focus method | Internal |
Image stabilisation |
• 3 stops |
Filter thread | • 67mm • Does not rotate on focus |
Supplied accessories |
• Front and rear caps |
Optional accessories | • EW-73B Hood, • LP1116 Case |
Weight | 475 g (16.7 oz) |
Dimensions | 78.5 mm diameter x 92 mm length (3.1 x 3.6 in) |
Lens Mount | Canon EF-S only |
Other | Supplies distance information for E-TTL II flash metering |
* Supplied accessories may differ in each country or area
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The 17-85mm is a member of Canon’s family of mid-range zooms, and as such the build quality is a clear step up from the lightweight plastic of the 18-55mm kit lens, if not quite up to the standards of Canon’s professional-level ‘L’ series. The lens mount is metal, and the barrel plastic; unfortunately it's not quite as solid as Canon's other mid-range zooms such as the 28-135mm F3.5-5.6 IS USM, and the plastic feels a bit thin and creaky, and deforms a little under pressure, which isn't terribly reassuring. However to its credit, and unlike the 18-55mm, the 17-85mm does have a proper manual focusing ring and distance scale. At 475g in weight, this lens is also perfectly light enough to carry around with you all day long.
The lens feels well-balanced on both the small EOS Rebel XTi/400D and weightier EOS 40D. Controls are well-placed; the zoom ring is positioned perfectly for operation by the thumb and forefinger, with the slim manual focus ring then operated by the middle finger. When held in landscape format, only a slight shift in grip is required to reach either the IS switch, or the AF/MF switch on the side of lens barrel with the thumb, although they are somewhat less easy to find with the camera in portrait orientation. Overall, a well thought out, balanced design.
NOTE the line marked 'Nyquist Frequency' indicates the maximum theoretical resolution of the camera body used for testing. Whenever the measured numbers exceed this value, this simply indicates that the lens out-resolves the sensor at this point - the calculated MTF values themselves become meaningless.
The 17-85 gives what can only be described as mixed results in our studio tests. Its performance is rather disappointing at wideangle, where it serves up a witch’s brew of corner softness, green/magenta chromatic aberration, barrel distortion and light falloff; however it becomes very much better at telephoto, and in the 35-70mm range is really very good indeed.
Resolution | Best results are obtained in the normal to telephoto range, where the lens gives consistently high MTF readings from 35mm to 85mm. Unfortunately things go downhill towards wide angle, especially in the corners which are distinctly soft at 17mm. The lens appears to be optimized to perform wide open at all focal lengths, and shows no systematic increase in quality on stopping down to smaller apertures; at F11 and beyond the sharpness drops rapidly due to diffraction, as expected. We’d certainly advise against using apertures much smaller than F16, except in those rare cases where extreme depth of field is important. |
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Chromatic Aberration | Chromatic aberration is distinctly worst at 17mm, where the almost-overlapping red and blue lines indicate green-magenta fringing, which is visually the most intrusive (see also the example below). The story is similar at 24mm, but at 35mm and beyond CA becomes much less of an issue. |
Falloff | We consider falloff to become perceptible when the corner illumination falls to more than 1 stop less than the centre. Once again, the lens gives a poor showing at 17mm, with 1.7 stops of falloff wide open; you’ll need to stop down to around F8-11 to reduce it completely below perceptible levels. However aside from that, there’s nothing too much to worry about, with just a hint of falloff wide open at 24mm. |
Distortion |
The 17-85mm also shows unusually high barrel distortion at wide angles, measuring a whopping 2.4% at 17mm. This is also not ‘pure’ barrel distortion but a more complex ‘wave’-type, with the barrel effect most pronounced towards the centre, then pinched in again towards the edges, which makes it relatively difficult to correct in software. At 24mm and longer the pattern changes to pincushion, and at its worst reaches -1.5% at 50mm; again pretty pronounced, and readily visible if the image should contain straight lines. |
By far the most problematic aspect of this lens’s performance in real-life shooting is chromatic aberration at wide angle. Strong green/magenta fringing is visible in 17mm shots even at modest magnifications, and stopping down the aperture has no effect. It remains a problem at 24mm, but is much less of an issue at longer focal lengths. This type of chromatic aberration can be ‘corrected’ in software, and particularly efficiently if you’re prepared to shoot RAW. For instance, using our standard converter, Adobe Camera RAW, processing with -30 Red/Cyan and +30 Blue/Yellow effectively eliminated CA.
With version 3.4 of their free RAW conversion software Digital Photo Pro (DPP), Canon have added lens aberration correction support for the 17-85mm IS. This allows RAW shooters to eliminate (or at least reduce) the effects of chromatic aberration, falloff (which Canon refer to as 'peripheral illumination'), geometric distortion, and 'color blur' (which appears to be Canon's term for axial chromatic aberration).
DPP's aberration correction works by using profiles specific for each lens, making the software fairly straightforward to use, and with no major need to play with the slider settings (except perhaps for the occasional small tweak). Here's an example of chromatic aberration correction using default settings for the image above; DPP has effectively removed the ugly green and magenta fringing completely.
The corrections for peripheral illumination and geometric distortion are equally impressive; in the example below we can see clear correction for falloff even at F8 (however in more extreme cases, this will come at some cost to image noise). More importantly, the strong barrel distortion at 17mm is also well corrected; this is most obvious in the bowed line along the lower edge of the frame, but verticals also become properly parallel. Of course there's no such thing as a free lunch, and this kind of software distortion correction will require some localized 'stretching' of the image data resulting in a loss of resolution in affected regions, but overall this is a small price to pay when distortion is otherwise objectionable.
EOS 400D, 17mm F8
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Original | Peripheral Illumination | PI + Distortion |
The 17-85mm features Canon's second generation optical image stabilization, which claims to allow handholding at shutter speeds 3 stops lower than usual before blur from camera shake becomes apparent. It's near-silent in use, with just a quiet whirring noise when operational, and with distinct clicks when it activates and deactivates, presumably due to the lens elements moving in and out of the 'at rest' position.
We've generally found the units in SLR lenses to be pretty effective in real-world use, and to quantify this, we subjected the 17-85mm to our studio image stabilization test at both wideangle and telephoto. With its effective focal length range of 27-136mm, we'd normally expect to be able to get good results handheld at 1/30 sec at wideangle, and 1/160 sec at telephoto without image stabilization. The subject distance for these tests was approximately 2.5m.
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17mm IS OFF | 85mm IS OFF |
17mm IS ON | 85mm IS ON |
Here we can see clearly the effectiveness of Canon's in-lens IS unit. At the wideangle end and shutter speeds of 1/6 sec, IS is delivering 70% critically sharp shots, compared to just 20% without. Even at very slow shutter speeds of 0.3 sec, IS is giving usable images with no more than mild blur 80% of the time, compared to just 10% without.
The EF-S 17-85mm is a major step up from Canon’s EF-S 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 II kit lens, adding an extended focal length range, image stabilisation, fast and silent autofocus with a decent manual focus option, and substantially improved build quality. This makes it, at first sight at least, an ideal all-in-one ‘walkaround’ lens for Canon’s APS-C SLRs, which will cover the majority of photographic opportunities when travelling light.
And to a great extent it delivers on this potential, with good imaging performance over much of its range, especially in that extended telephoto region, plus effective image stabilisation which works as promised. But there’s no getting away from this lens’s Achilles’ Heel, which is comparatively poor optical performance at the wideangle end. Most intrusive is the green/magenta chromatic aberration at 17mm, which is highly visible in a wide variety of shooting situations. Now if you’re only planning on viewing files on screen or making small prints, this may not be a huge problem, but if you are making large prints or viewing at 100% it’s a clear issue. However it can be effectively overcome if you are prepared to shoot in RAW and eliminate the CA in post-processing, using either Canon's Digital Photo Pro (v3.4 or later) or third party software such as Photoshop.
The lens also exhibits significant barrel distortion at 17mm, making it far from ideal for photographing architecture, except perhaps Gaudi in Barcelona, or City Hall amd the ‘Gherkin’ in London. And with its relatively slow maximum aperture, this is also not an ideal lens for low light/indoor photography of people or other moving subjects. It’s important to appreciate that while image stabilisation will allow hand-holding at slower shutter speeds than usual without suffering image degradation due to camera shake, those shutter speeds are still slow, and moving subjects will therefore still be blurred. Likewise the slow maximum aperture will limit flash range, so for this kind of photography, a faster zoom or prime lens will be a better option.
So overall the judgement to be made is whether the attractive feature set of this lens offsets the negatives, and most importantly the problems with distortion and chromatic aberration at wide angle. If you shoot primarily towards the telephoto end, this lens will reward you with excellent results, but if your interests tend more towards the wideangle end of the spectrum and you don't want to shoot RAW, then it may well be a good idea to look away now. However overall it must be said this lens is really rather enjoyable to use; the zoom range is very flexible, the autofocus fast and silent, and the image stabilizer highly effective. So in balance its advantages probably outweigh its disadvantages, and despite its faults this lens is ultimately still one of our favourites for Canon's APS-C dSLRs. Therefore, as long as its limitations are appreciated, it just about earns our recommendation.
GOOD FOR:
Walkaround lens for outdoor shooting and travel use.
NOT SO GOOD FOR:
Indoor available light or flash shooting.
Architectual photography where distortion would be a problem.
Detail | Rating (out of 10) |
Build quality | 7.5 |
Ergonomics & handling | 8.0 |
Features | 8.5 |
Image quality | 7.5 |
Value | 7.0 |
Recommended (with reservations)
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There are 15 images in the samples gallery. Please do not reproduce any of these images on a website or any newsletter / magazine without prior permission (see our copyright page). We make the originals available for private users to download to their own machines for personal examination or printing (in conjunction with this review), we do so in good faith, please don't abuse it.
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Canon 17-85mm EF Samples Gallery - Posted 28th January 2008 |
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