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FLD Elements Enhance New Sigma Glass

Robert Franner


Published: 03/08/2010 09:09:00 AM EST in Digital Imaging

3 comments

FLD Elements Enhance New Sigma Glass

Sigma announced four new zoom lenses at PMA 2010, three of which use "F" low dispersion (FLD) elements, which the firm holds to perform as well as fluorite in compensating for colour aberration. The lower density optical material also results in a slight weight reduction.

The new 8-16mm F4.5-5.6 DC HSM, the first ultra wide zoom lens with a minimum focal length of 8mm, uses four FLD elements (a total 15 elements in 11 groups).

Casting an image circle only suitable for APS-C size image sensors, the compact lens offers an equivalent angle of view of a 12-24mm lens on a 35mm camera.
There's also one hybrid aspherical lens, and two glass mould elements; while Sigma's SuperMulti-Layer Coating reduces flare and ghosting.

The lens, equipped with Hyper Sonic Motor (HSM) full-time manual override capability, can focus to 24 cm throughout its zoom range.

Although pricing is TBA, expect April availability for Canon- and Nikon-compatible versions, says Gentec international, the Canadian distributor. Models with Pentax, Sigma, and Sony mounts are slated for later in the year. None of the lenses described here will come in the Four Thirds mount.

A new, compact walk-around lens, the Sigma 17-50mm F2.8 EX DC OS HSM, also benefits from Hyper Sonic focusing and FLD elements (two are employed here).

The f2.8 maximum aperture is maintained throughout its zoom range, while optical stabilization is said to deliver a four-stop advantage. For DSLRs with sensor-shift mechanical stabilization (Sony and Pentax), Sigma repeats its mantra that O.I.S. works via the viewfinder. Also. O.I.S. can outperform sensor shift in reducing camera shake in some situations.

Canadian availability is scheduled for June 2010 (for Canon and Nikon mounts).

While it's hardly compact (it casts a full-frame image circle), Sigma's APO 70-200 F2.8 EX DG OS HSM "pro-grade" zoom lens provides a large maximum aperture of f2.8 throughout its entire zoom range.

Two FLD elements (22 elements in 17 groups) and optical stabilization are on tap in a large, tri-pod mountable design. Expect this in May (Canon mount; with the other four to follow).

The massive (1,970 g) APO 50-500mm F4.5-6.3 DG OS HSM, a 10:1 zooming ultra telephoto design, is the only one of the four not to employ FLD glass; but you can find four Special Low Dispersion (SLD) glass elements among its 16 elements in 22 groups.

Also usable for full frame cameras, the big news is that this lens, an update of an existing formula, now benefits from optical stabilization. There's also Hyper Sonic Motor (HSM), and a maximum magnification ratio of 1:3.1 (at 200mm).

Availability is April for Canon and Nikon mounts.
For more information, visit: www.gentec-intl.com





Article Tags:  elements, sigma, canon, optical, stabilization, range, throughout, nikon, mounts, maximum, sonic, availability, hyper, groups, compact, image, glass, large, benefits, design, aperture, frame, shift, mount, sensor, april, ultra, dispersion, lenses, circle,

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FLD Elements Enhance New Sigma Glass








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3 comments »


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fatcow March 16, 2010, 18:05 pm

What HSM stands for have been explained within your article (albeit at the end of the article) which makes another explanation of HSM within the same article redundant. I undersand that manufacturers tend to choose the easy way out (ie calling it "F2.8" instead of "f/2.8") but as a source of information which I deeply respect, I expect Marketnews not only regurtitate what manufacturers say but to also educate its readers. PS: I've read (and created) many press releases, most of them, I should agree, are horrible (and that includes some that I wrote several years ago -- yikes!)

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RF at Large March 16, 2010, 14:40 pm

It's more challenging than you might think to tailor news to the expertise of the reader: we wrestle with this all the time. Not everyone will know what HSM stands for, or catch the acronym in the rather lengthy product title (created by the manufacturer, Sigma, not by me). If you think the submission is prolix (and I will agree to a point), you should see the original release. Further to that point: Sigma and others use the convention of calling a lens "50mm F2.8" and not as a fraction of its focal length. I sympathize with your impatience in this matter, but all to often, we've been criticized for being too terse and leaving the non-expert reader in the dust as a consequence.

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fatcow March 15, 2010, 20:47 pm

Holy redundancy, Batman: "A new, compact walk-around lens, the Sigma 17-50mm F2.8 EX DC OS HSM, also benefits from Hyper Sonic focusing and FLD elements" HSM stands for Hyper Sonic Motor, of course it benefits from Hyper Sonic focusing. "APO 50-500mm F4.5-6.3 DG OS HSM, a 10:1 zooming ultra telephoto design" Well, 50-200mm is 10x zoom, there is no need to add "a 10:1 zooming ultra telephoto design" and also the spelling for aperture is completely wrong for this entire article; there is no such thing as F2.8. It should be written as f/2.8. There isn't a single lens out there that's even F1, let alone F2.8. Anybody who can make an F2.8 lens can make light out of nothing. (if you know about aperture you know what I'm talking about). As an information source for the industry, I expect better than the above drivel of a so-called article.

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