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Canon EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM Review

Ultimate Travel Lens?

Peter Kun Frary


 

Normal Lenses & Zooms

What is a normal lens? In the heyday of film SLRdom it was a fast 50mm optic: coverage to meet the sweet spot of the human eye; fast aperture for bright viewfinder and usefulness in any light; petite stature for easy transport; and affordable for budding photographers. Back in the day, a young buck armed with a Nikon FM and Nikkor 50 1.2 AI was "the freakin' man," and was ready for any situation from murky bar portraits to in-your-face street candids.

Blue Rod • Las Vegas, USA • EOS 20D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Enter zooms a few years later. Although zooms had been around for years, they were expensive, bulky and not very sharp or flare resistant. They were also mainly the domain of photojournalists. Nikon debuted the Nikkor 35-70 3.5-4.5 in 1985, the first affordable and lightweight zoom with decent optics. It slowly became the new "normal lens." So, the normal zoom began by dancing around both sides of the old 50 mm full frame standard. Thus, 24-70, 24-85, 24-105, 28-70, 28-80, 28-105, 35-70, 35-105, 35-135, etc., are considered normal zooms for full frame bodies such as the EOS 3 or 5D.

Chiesa degli Scalzi • Venice, Italy • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

The popularity of the tiny APS-C sensor (1.6x crop factor) has redefined the normal lens as a fast 35 mm prime, e.g., EF 35 2.0 or EF 35 1.4L USM. Thus the new generation of 17-40, 17-55, 17-85, 18-50, etc., optics are the normal zooms of APS-C DSLRs.

These normal zooms are the most useful range for general and travel photography, encompassing wide, normal and short telephoto ranges. Mount a normal zoom on your DSLR and you're good to go for scenics, group shots, candids and portraits. For many weekend and holiday shooters this is the only lens they need.

EF-S17-55 2.8 IS USM, Normal Zoom Deluxe

Introduced May 2006, the EF-S17-55 2.8 IS USM is an impressive feat of engineering: high-performance Image Stabilizer (IS), constant F2.8 aperture, ultra fast ring-type USM, wide zoom range (3.24x) and L series optical performance. I bit the bullet and replaced my oft and long used travel companion, the EF17-40 4LUSM, with this amazing optic.

Canon EF-S17-55 2.8 IS USM Red ring wantabe. Photo courtesy Canon.

Not Built Like A Brick But Good Enough

For a normal zoom, it's large and chunky, 645 g, but much lighter than its cousin the EF 24-70 2.8L USM. Build quality is good but not at L series standards. There are no weather seals and the finish isn't as attractive as that of the EF 24-105 4L IS USM. Although fit and finish are excellent, it looks more like a $500 or $600 lens rather than a $1000 one.

Pantheon • Rome • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Focus and Zoom

A ring-type USM (Ultrasonic Motor) achieves focus by driving an internal lens group. Needless to say, AF is extremely fast and surefooted on my EOS 20D and 40D. The front element does not rotate and the barrel does not expand or contract during focusing. Of course, being an USM lens, it is silent during AF.

It has FTM, allowing you to manually focus without switching out of AF mode. The focus ring is narrow, coarse in pitch and ribbed. It's not as smooth as the EF 24-105 4L USM and light years from a manual Nikkor. If you prefocus manually, the distance window in meters and feet is extremely useful. Although not a macro lens, it focuses close enough for head shots and moderately small details (35cm/.17x).

Yellow Rod • Las Vegas • EOS 20D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

The twist zoom action is fairly smooth, damped and does not creep. Zoom action is not as even as EF 24-105 4L IS USM. Zooming is accomplished by expanding and contracting a single nested barrel. The barrel extends considerably--nearly doubling in length--while zooming to 55 mm. The zoom ring is large and covered with a ribbed rubber surface.

The 77 mm filter size makes for expensive filters, but I can share filters with my EF 17-40 4L USM and EF 24-105 4L IS USM. Canon recommends removing the hood while using a polarizing filter. However, if you have agile fingers it's easy to rotate the filter through the petal cutouts of the lens hood. Unfortunately that lens hood will cost you extra--a lot extra.

Bartender on Freemont • Las Vegas, USA • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Optical Quality

This is among the best zooms I've used. I have no second thoughts about shooting wide open as it's sharp and contrasty at all focal lengths from normal focus to infinity. At F2.8 it shows some softness at high magnification around the edges, but is pin sharp in the center. The edges sharpen up nicely by stopping down a half or full stop.

Racked out to 55mm and shot wide open it is an excellent portrait lens. Plus, the circular 7-blade diaphragm produces an attractive background blur (bokeh) when stopped down. Although bokeh isn't as creamy smooth as some L series primes and zooms, the EF-S17-55 2.8 IS USM can still bring home the bacon. Optical quality is comparable to my EF 24-105 4L IS USM and slightly better than my EF 17-40 4L USM. The 17-55 suffers a small loss of contrast and sharpness at macro distances (35cm). In this regard my 24-105 4L and 17-40 4L are slightly better.

Cowboy at Fremont Street • Las Vegas • EOS 20D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM • F2.8, 1/15, ISO 400, IS engaged

Pixel View Detail • Cowboy at Fremont Street • EOS 20D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM • F2.8, 1/15, ISO 400, IS engaged

The brightness, contrast and snap of this lens is apparent through the viewfinder. After all, there's plenty of exotic glass in there, e.g., three aspherical lens elements (one glass mold, two replica) and a UD (ultra-low dispersion) lens element. Amazingly, there are 19 elements in that fat little barrel. Light must really struggle to get to the other side! Unfortunately there is a downside to 19 elements: flare. Flare isn't bad and is better than most consumer zooms, e.g., whips the EF 28-135 3.5-5.6 IS USM silly in this regard. However, flare is not as well controlled as the EF 17-40 4L USM or EF 24-105 4L IS USM. Hawaiian sunsets result in a little more ghosting and flare than my L zooms and even the EF-S 15-85 3.5-5.6 IS USM.

EF 85 1.8 USM • Canon EOS 7D & EF-s 17-55 2.8 IS USM, F11, ISO 400, foil & white reflectors, RC-1 & Bogan tripod

The short end, like all wide zooms, suffers from a small amount of barrel distortion. The long end has a small amount of pincushion distortion. Nevertheless, distortion is less pronounced than my EF 28-135 3.5-5.6 IS USM and EF 24-85 3.5-4.5 USM. For most types of images, distortion isn't readily apparent. Nevertheless, architectural and product photographers may want to stick with primes.

Like all wide zooms, the EF-S17-55 2.8 IS USM reveals a small amount of light fall-off at the wide end when shot wide open (see Cowboy at Fremont Street above). In typical night scenes and portraits, I usually don't notice light fall-off since edges are naturally dark or de-emphasized. Stop down a little and light fall-off is gone. I found light fall-off to be a minor issue and less pronounced than the light fall-off of the EF 24-105 4L IS USM (with FF). Only those that shoot blue skies or white walls wide open will notice the slight darkening of corners.

Nice Knocker • Firenza, Italia • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Image Stabilization

This would be a kickass optic without Image Stabilization (IS). However, IS propels this zoom straight into hog heaven. Tiny gyro sensors coupled to a CPU detect the degree and direction of camera shake and counteract this vibration by moving a compensating optical group. Subsequently, I almost always get a sharp picture, even three stops below my normal hand held shutter speed. Damn! If I brace myself or shoot a volley of shots I can get away with another stop or two. Here's what Papa Canon says about IS in the 17-55:

Moreover, equipped with such features as the company’s high-performance Image Stabilizer (IS), which provides the equivalent effect of a shutter speed three stops faster, and full-time manual focus, Canon’s EF-S17-55mm f/2.8 IS USM lens dramatically expands photography opportunities for professional and advanced amateur users.

IS has changed the way I take pictures. I used to put away my camera when conditions got dark, now I keep on shooting (I avoid flash except for fill). However, IS is not just for dim conditions, it helps eminently in any high vibration situation such as high wind, airplanes, automobiles or boats.

The Church of Our Lady • Brugge, Belgium • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Image Stabilization does nothing for subject movement and will not replace a large aperture prime for sports shooters. However, IS is a Godsend for general photography and worth its weight in gold.

Currently this is my ultimate ready-for-anything travel lens. IS coupled with the fast F2.8 aperture leaves few excuses for missing a shot.

The Rape of the Sabine Women • Firenza, Italia • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM Giambologna's famous sculpture in the Loggia dei Lanzi.

Popup Flash--Blocked?

I was pleasantly surprised to find the popup flash of my 20D, 40D and 50D to be useable with this lens. I assumed such a bulky lens would completely block the popup but such is not the case. At 17mm from 2 meters out there is no shadow from the lens. At closer distances there is a small shadow at the bottom of the frame (even smaller for the 40D/50D). For daylight fill, it is normally unnoticeable. I've not used a Rebel XTi/400D but have heard the lens shadow is larger than the 20D.

In the images below, you can see a slight lens shadow from the popup flash. In most cases I don't find it objectional and often it improves the image by de-emphasizing an unimportant part of the picture. If the shadow is objectionable you can zoom out or step back slightly to get rid of it. Don't even think of using a lens hood if you intend to use popup flash.

Ala Moana Center • Honolulu • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM & popup flash. Note slight flash vignette at bottom of frame.

Chinatown • Honolulu • EOS 50D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM & popup flash. Note slight flash vignette at bottom of frame.

Dust Vac?

I've read reports of this lens being a dust magnet. The air vents behind the front element retaining ring suck in dust during zoom and focus operations. The dust problems primarily come from lenses lacking UV filters. Apparently the filter completes the seal and prevents dust from being draw in. I've always used a UV filter for protection and my EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM is clean after years of use in deserts, dusty streets, beaches and smoky casinos.

If you went without a filter and find a barrel full of lint, you may find these dust images and fix enlighthening.

Florence, Italy • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Conclusion

This is the pimp daddy royale of normal APS-C zooms. It's well made, sharp, contrasty and focuses fast, but is a little more flare prone than the EF 24-105 4L IS USM and EF-S 15-85 3.5-5.6 IS USM. It balances perfectly on an EOS 50D or 7D, but feels front heavy on a Rebel.

Florence, Italy • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

I wish it had the mechanical precision (primarily manual focus), cosmetic detail and weather sealing of the EF 24-105 4L IS USM. For a grand, this puppy should look, feel and smell like a freakin' L optic. But at least it performs like one! Nevertheless it doesn't feel cheap and is more solid than the EF 28-135 3.5-5.6 IS USM or EF 24-85 3.5-4.5 USM--just not up to L standards. Also, after squeezing a grand out of you, Canon should toss in a lens hood and case. Incidentally, the hoods from the EF 17-40 4L USM and EF 24-105 4L IS USM fit and do not vignette.

Nymphenburg Palace • Munich, Germany • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

Although a little bulky and heavy, I find the EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM a wonderful travel lens for APS-C cameras, and I've humped it from Vegas to Venice without a whimper or glitch. I love the range, aperture, AF speed and sharpness of this lens. The combination of IS and a fast F2.8 aperture make it ideal for available light shooting on streets, churches, casinos, museums and building interiors. Shooting on city streets at night without flash, I rarely need to dial past ISO 800. I feel confident to shoot wide open in any situation and bring back sharp images.

Highly recommended for serious amateurs and world trekkers. Not recommended for those wishing to travel light or those with a feeble credit card limit. Freakin' kickass lens!

Fashion Show Mall Girls • Las Vegas, USA • EOS 40D, EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM

More Images taken with the EF-S 17-55 2.8 IS USM (click to enlarge)

     

Source Materials

Canon EFS Lens EF-S17-55mm F/2.8 IS USM Instruction. Tokyo: Canon, 2006. (CT1-7561-001).

Canon EOS Forums

Bob Atkins Canon EOS forum

FM Canon EOS Forum

Richard MacDonald • Las VegasEOS 40D and EF-s 17-55 2.8 IS USM (@F2.8)

Canon EOS Equipment Resources

Canon Camera Museum

DSLRs, Lenses and Film

EOS Documentation Project

Photo.net • Canon EOS SLRs

1/11/2007 • Revised 7/7/2012

©Copyright 2007-2012 by Peter Kun Frary • All Rights Reserved

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