EF 35–350mm f/3.5–5.6L USM
The Canon EF 35-350mm f/3.5-5.6L USM
MakerCanon
Technical data
TypeZoom
Focus driveUltrasonic motor
Focal length35–350mm
Crop factor1.0
Aperture (max/min)f/3.5–5.6 – f/22–32
Close focus distance0.6 m
Max. magnification0.25
Diaphragm blades8
Construction21 elements in 15 groups
Features
Lens-based stabilizationNo No
Unique featuresL-Series
ApplicationTelephoto zoom
Physical
Max. length167.4 mm
Diameter85 mm
Weight1,385 g
Filter diameter72 mm
Accessories
Lens hoodEW-78 / EW-78 II
CaseLH-D22
Angle of view
Horizontal54° - 6°
Vertical38° - 4°
Diagonal63° - 7°
History
IntroductionJanuary 1993
DiscontinuationJune 2004
SuccessorCanon EF 28–300mm

The EF 35–350mm f/3.5–5.6L USM lens is a discontinued telephoto zoom lens manufactured by Canon.

This lens has an EF type mount, that fits the Canon EOS line of cameras. It was introduced in January 1993. Featuring the highest zoom ratio (10x) of any interchangeable SLR lens at the time, the lens was and is popular among photojournalists. It has now been superseded by the Canon EF 28–300mm lens. When used on a digital EOS body with a field of view compensation factor of 1.6x, such as the Canon EOS 7D, it provides a narrow field of view, equivalent to a 56–560mm lens mounted on a 35mm frame body.[1][2]

The lens contains 21 elements in 15 groups. As an L-series lens, it features two ultra-low dispersion (UD) elements, and utilizes Canon's ring USM for fast and silent focusing. It has a push-pull zoom design with the possibility to lock the lens at the desired focal length. The lens exhibits strong barrel distortion and chromatic aberration at the wide end. On an APS-C body, the lens shows almost no vignetting, even at its maximum aperture, f/5.6, at 350mm.[2]

See also

References

  1. Canon. "EF35–350mm f/3.5–5.6L USM". Canon Camera Museum. Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 26 December 2010.
  2. 1 2 "Canon EF 35–350mm f/3.5–5.6 USM L — Review / Test Report". photozone.de. Retrieved 26 December 2010.
The Canon EF 35-350mm L USM, partially extended.


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