Shekar Dattatri
February 20th, 2005, 05:33 AM
In preparation for a big shoot next week I've been putting my recently acquired XL-2 (Pal) to the test. I came across some interesting findings, which I thought I would share.
1) The first thing I noticed was that there is virtually no difference in magnification between my 16x manual Canon lens and the new 20X lens at full tele! (yes, this applies for 4:3 as well as 16:9). I find this weird, to say the least. I then compared both lenses against my old XL-1 16x auto lens and found that the magnification with this lens at full tele was less than the other two, but not by a huge degree. So what's the deal with this 20x business?!
2) Wanting to test the camera at really low light levels, I boosted gain to +18 (shooting 50i) and ran the test in a room with very low ambient lighting. For the test I shot the colourful cover of a book that was lying around and did both close up and wide shots. Locking the camera on my tripod and, without changing settings in between shots, I tried the test with three lenses: my three and half year old Auto 16x (which came with my XL-1), my manual 16x Canon lens (about 8 months old) and my brand new 20 X lens. The results were quite startling.
The worst image came from the 20X - cold and very grainy - followed closely by the 16x auto lens. The manual 16x was a revelation. The picture quality was substantially better. If you pressed me to quantify based on eye judgement, I would say there was at least a 100% improvement in picture quality. Noise was considerably reduced and the tone was warm and 'friendly'. Whereas I would consider the shots with the first two lenses in that situation as eminently unusable, the same shot captured with the Manual 16x was eminently usable. I'm glad I have the Manual 16x and have decided to make this the default lens on my camera. I think I will use the Auto 20x only in situations requiring image stabilisation. I've heard it said many times that there couldn't possibly be any difference in image quality between the Canon auto and manual lenses as it's all the same glass. Well, I've also heard it said that the proof of the pudding is in the eating! I've eaten, and the winner for me is the 16x manual on all counts. If the flourite in the new 20x does something great I don't know what it is.
Incidentally, in case you're wondering if I got a bad 20x to start with, I ran the test in good light as well and, interestingly there was no discernible difference between the auto 20x and the manual 16x. Both were excellent and there was no difference in the tone either.
1) The first thing I noticed was that there is virtually no difference in magnification between my 16x manual Canon lens and the new 20X lens at full tele! (yes, this applies for 4:3 as well as 16:9). I find this weird, to say the least. I then compared both lenses against my old XL-1 16x auto lens and found that the magnification with this lens at full tele was less than the other two, but not by a huge degree. So what's the deal with this 20x business?!
2) Wanting to test the camera at really low light levels, I boosted gain to +18 (shooting 50i) and ran the test in a room with very low ambient lighting. For the test I shot the colourful cover of a book that was lying around and did both close up and wide shots. Locking the camera on my tripod and, without changing settings in between shots, I tried the test with three lenses: my three and half year old Auto 16x (which came with my XL-1), my manual 16x Canon lens (about 8 months old) and my brand new 20 X lens. The results were quite startling.
The worst image came from the 20X - cold and very grainy - followed closely by the 16x auto lens. The manual 16x was a revelation. The picture quality was substantially better. If you pressed me to quantify based on eye judgement, I would say there was at least a 100% improvement in picture quality. Noise was considerably reduced and the tone was warm and 'friendly'. Whereas I would consider the shots with the first two lenses in that situation as eminently unusable, the same shot captured with the Manual 16x was eminently usable. I'm glad I have the Manual 16x and have decided to make this the default lens on my camera. I think I will use the Auto 20x only in situations requiring image stabilisation. I've heard it said many times that there couldn't possibly be any difference in image quality between the Canon auto and manual lenses as it's all the same glass. Well, I've also heard it said that the proof of the pudding is in the eating! I've eaten, and the winner for me is the 16x manual on all counts. If the flourite in the new 20x does something great I don't know what it is.
Incidentally, in case you're wondering if I got a bad 20x to start with, I ran the test in good light as well and, interestingly there was no discernible difference between the auto 20x and the manual 16x. Both were excellent and there was no difference in the tone either.