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RF 100-500 background distortion ? Please help

ksmithson916
Apprentice

I notice that most of my shots have this lateral line distortion in the foreground_A6A3532.jpg and background, is this a defective lens?

pics attrached_A6A3451.jpg

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions

Waddizzle
Legend
Legend

Are you using a UV or CPL filter?

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"Enjoying photography since 1972."

View solution in original post

11 REPLIES 11

jrhoffman75
Legend
Legend

Hello.

Top photo looks there is a lot of reflection or something happening.

Screenshot 2022-12-16 134649.jpg

Is it always in the same location? Do you perhaps have something on the sensor?

What if you placed your subject in that location so that the subject is sharp and the problem would stand out better.

John Hoffman
Conway, NH

1D X Mark III, M200, Many lenses, Pixma PRO-100, Pixma TR8620a, Lr Classic

Waddizzle
Legend
Legend

Are you using a UV or CPL filter?

--------------------------------------------------------
"Enjoying photography since 1972."

ebiggs1
Legend
Legend

I am not seeing a lens problem beyond how it handles OOF BG. I suspect this BG aberration changes as your aperture changes?

I would also advise you remove any add-on filter you may have used.

EB
EOS 1D, EOS 1D MK IIn, EOS 1D MK III, EOS 1Ds MK III, EOS 1D MK IV and EOS 1DX and many lenses.

johnrmoyer
Whiz
Whiz

Which camera? Latest firmware?

I think that IBIS will sometimes do that especially after waking from sleep when the zoom moved while the camera was asleep. The IBIS did not notice that the zoom had changed during sleep and used the wrong focal length. If that is the case, then turning the camera off and back on again might fix it. The 1.6 firmware seemed to me to fix it for the EOS R5.

I was in fact using a fairly pricy $130 UV filter, removing it fixed the problem, thanks

For future reference, how would the filter effect the photo? Thanks.

John
Canon EOS T7; EF-S 18-55mm IS; EF 28-135mm IS; EF 75-300mm; Sigma 150-600mm DG

ebiggs1
Legend
Legend

"For future reference, how would the filter effect the photo? Thanks."

John some filters are not up to the high standards of top lenses like L series. The are simply lenses themselves and are not produced with top coatings and such. The can enter aberrations and reflections. Even the best can at a very very few circumstances do so. But they screw off as easily as they screw on.

EB
EOS 1D, EOS 1D MK IIn, EOS 1D MK III, EOS 1Ds MK III, EOS 1D MK IV and EOS 1DX and many lenses.


@Tintype_18 wrote:

For future reference, how would the filter effect the photo? Thanks.


I cannot say with any certainty.  I have seen this before with my EF 100-400mm II. The sensor has a UV layer built into, but UV filters did not affect photos with other lenses.

Also, the aberrations were neither perfectly horizontal or vertical, which made me think that the issue was probably not the camera or the lens.  Removing the filter not only eliminated the aberrations, it also made the photos MUCH sharper.

[EDIT] Oh, yeah.  I use B+W Nano Clear filters on my lenses.  I do not use them for protection from impacts.  I use mainly use them to keep the front element clean.  

I have never had need to clean my front elements.  But, I frequently find myself cleaning the front filters.  I have to clean off smoke residue from BBQ cook offs, tree pollen from being in the woods, and fingerprints.  I am really sloppy when it comes to putting on a lens cap. 

--------------------------------------------------------
"Enjoying photography since 1972."

It did end up being the filter when I removed it all pics had perfect bokeh.

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