Product Comparison: Canon EF 40mm f/2.8 STM vs Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 STM
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- The lens now has a metal mount, which gives it an all better look and a bit more sturdiness in the hand.
- Now the mount it metal where before it was plastic like the rest of the lens.
- The focus ring is a actually usable for people without hobbit hands and the back has a metal mount. The build quality makes it look like a professional lens too so no more walking around embarrassed at the sight of expensive DSLR with a plasticy lens on.
- Metal mount makes this feel more solid and less fragile.
- On the rear of the lens we now have a metallic mount, something I’m so glad to see. Moving up from the plastic mount has increased it’s weight slightly, but also hugely increases the longevity of this lens.
- The lens is not so large that it would bother anyone & the weight is just right in my opinion.
- It is so easy to run around with and shoot great photos Light-weight, fast focus, and good for low-light situations.
- You can not get a better value for this price range, solid feeling, not to plastic feel but it is a bit on the lighter side feels looks like it should feel heavier but still a good enough weight to feel like it is solid.
- This lens is light weight, super sharp, and has amazing bokeh.
- Manual focus also works nicely but you have to switch it to MF on the lens only then will it work.
- The Auto-Focus is fairly quick. Of course there is quicker out there but not at this price point. The image quality is clear. The lens is not so large that it would bother anyone & the weight is just right in my opinion.
- This is a great lens. It is so easy to run around with and shoot great photos Light-weight, fast focus, and good for low-light situations.
- The only thing I wish it had is the depth of field gauge so I can set it up for zone focus in manual mode.
- Auto focus is a little noisy, no problem for photos... But for video don't plan on using any audio from the camera or a mic on the hot shoe mount...
- Plus the STM motor is much quieter than the previous generation lens.
- Focus is achieved by front element extension (nested barrel. The STM motor is quieter than the prior model, albeit not completely silent.
- Again the STM is a bit loud and the focus a bit slow but for the price and the quality of this lens, it is completely justifiable.
- I love the soft whirl of a defocused background, and this seven-blade diaphragm does not disappoint, rendering smooth bokeh and pleasantly round specular highlights.
- Only downside I might say is that the focus ring doesn't directly adjust the focal elements, its more of a slightly delayed electronic feel - however, that is what STM means, I just didn't know that.