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Accidental Lens Release

michaelgirman
Contributor

 

  My 24-105L just fell off my 5D mkIII and rolled into the Seine.  The lens release button is way too sensitive and it is so easy to accidentally unlock without realizing it.  I went to twist the zoom ring and the lens rotated and dropped off.  Blogs are full of compaints of this occurance on mkii's.  

  This is definitely a design flaw.  It's not user error.  The button should be relocated or made to require more force to release  or have a detent position.  

  It's a shame that you have to gaffer tape a $2300 lens to a $2000 camera.  Be forewarned.  

 

 

184 REPLIES 184

Hey, Ron2 - I wouldn't be too sure that some of these guys got the point.  Lots of fanboys who think of the Canon brand as a religion and trolls that just want to argue.  One of my personal favorites is the guy who thinks that the lens release button is so big so you can change lenses with gloves on.  My other favorite is the guy who doesn't want any changes to the release button even if they result in an improvement.  
You gotta love it ...

"Great you got the point at last."

 

Not so sure about that but you certainly haven't got the point.  The button on a 1 series is substantially the same as it always has been. The size is nearly the same and it is somewhat recessed.  Exactly the way I want it !

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.

It's not so much a loyalty to a brand... it's annoyance with people who wont accept responsibility for their own actions or inattention.   

 

 

 

Sure, everyone occasionally makes a mistake.  But repsonsible people own their mistake.  They don't look for someone else to blame.

 

Tim Campbell
5D III, 5D IV, 60Da


@FloydSpellman wrote:

Hey, Ron2 - I wouldn't be too sure that some of these guys got the point.  Lots of fanboys who think of the Canon brand as a religion and trolls that just want to argue.  One of my personal favorites is the guy who thinks that the lens release button is so big so you can change lenses with gloves on.  My other favorite is the guy who doesn't want any changes to the release button even if they result in an improvement.  
You gotta love it ...


I don't know whether it makes me a fanboy or a troll, but my personal favorite is that I can float over this spat, not caring who's right or who wins, because I've always held my cameras in a way that keeps any part of my hand from being anywhere near the button. Problem(?) solved!  Smiley Wink

Bob
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania USA

JoeDavid
Enthusiast
👍👍👍
Currenly using R5, R5 mark II, and R7 mostly plus a variety of Canon RF and EF lens...

Ebiggs1 – 7,177 posts/365 days =19.6 years of daily posts

TCampbell – 2,745 posts/365 days = 7.5 years of daily posts

RobertTheFat – 2,979 posts/365 days = 8.1 years of daily posts

 

Boys, get a life …
Put down your keyboards and take some of that expensive equipment outside and shoot some pictures …

You don't have to reply to every post.  

We'll get by ... somehow


@FloydSpellman wrote:

Ebiggs1 – 7,177 posts/365 days =19.6 years of daily posts

TCampbell – 2,745 posts/365 days = 7.5 years of daily posts

RobertTheFat – 2,979 posts/365 days = 8.1 years of daily posts

 

Boys, get a life …
Put down your keyboards and take some of that expensive equipment outside and shoot some pictures …

You don't have to reply to every post.  

We'll get by ... somehow


LOL! Indeed - this may be why they don't seem to get it - they don't actually have time to use their cameras - they are too busy here denying that there could possibly be an issue with a Canon product!

 

Fanboys much? Hehe.

"Ebiggs1 – 7,177 posts/365 days =19.6 years of daily posts

TCampbell – 2,745 posts/365 days = 7.5 years of daily posts

RobertTheFat – 2,979 posts/365 days = 8.1 years of daily posts"

 

Nice to see you boys can do math for whatever reason?  Let's see now just who has the experience.  I am over 70 and been retired for 14 years from a very large major company where I did photography.  Plus I ran a good private photography business.  I still work every day to this day.  I got my first camera in 1955.  I still have it.  I shoot both brands of camera.  Nikon and Canon.  You can read some of my posts where I legitimately critique Canon.

 

I will try to show a little more courtesy to you two but I think I am well qualified to comment on this issue. I have seen your type many times.  One day you buy a high dollar camera and next week you are experts.  Nice!

 

Your complaint is nonsense.  Learn how to use your camera and stop whining about it.

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.

BTW, that was post 7,179 if you are still counting!  Smiley Very Happy

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.

I’m new to this forum because a few days ago my 24-105 IS II fell off my 5D MkIII.  I read through this entire thread and since there seems to be a dispute about whether the cause is poor or sloppy user technique or poor design of the lens release button, I decided to see if I could find some of the poster’s work to see if they looked like advanced users or not.  I started at the beginning and found an Instagram page for michaelgirman the first poster.  I’ve got to say that judging from his photographs, he has a sound grasp of technique.  He’s shot everything from available light portraits to travel to abstracts with some studio shots.  My conclusion is that anyone who can get the results with a 5D that he does, isn’t sloppy and doesn’t have poor technique.  Draw your own conclusions.

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