Sigma AF 150mm f/2.8 EX DG HSM APO Macro OS (Canon EOS) - APS-C Review / Test Report |
Lens Reviews -
Canon EOS (APS-C)
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Review by Klaus Schroiff, published August 2011
Special thanks to Alexandre Grandrémy for providing this lens for testing purposes!
Introduction
This is a follow-up review of the Sigma AF 150mm f/2.8 EX DG HSM APO macro OS based on an APS-C DSLR. Most of your previous findings in our full format review remain valid here so we've reused a good portion here again.
There aren't many third-party manufacturer products which truly stand out from the crowd. However, Sigma's 150mm f/2.8 EX DG HSM APO macro lens was clearly one of them. Sigma has just released its successor featuring Sigma's OS (Optical Image Stabilizer). The new OS implementation doesn't come for free - apart from the substantially higher price tag - now at around 900EUR/1100US$ (+ ~30%) - the new Sigma AF 150mm f/2.8 EX DG HSM APO macro OS also grew somewhat both in terms of size (+ ~10%) and especially weight (+ ~25%). Let's see whether these sacrifices are actually worth it.
The Sigma lens belongs to the EX ("Excellence") lineup thus the professional lens segment. The build quality is superb with a lens body made of rubber-coated metal based on a metal mount. The former crinkle-style EX finish is not used. The broad, rubberized focus ring operates smoothly - something that macro photographers will surely appreciate. The physical length of the lens remains constant throughout the focus range and the front element does not rotate, of course. The two-segment lens hood is a bit of a specialty by Sigma - the segments can be stacked in order of providing an even better protection when used on an APS-C DSLR. Such an approach may make sense on paper but it doesn't feel overly useful to us because the base segment is already deep enough. Anyway, it's not a drawback but a feature in any case. The supplied tripod mount is removable.
The AF is based on Sigma's ultrasonic motor (HSM) which operates both very fast (except in low light) and virtually silent. The tested sample focused accurately in phase-detection (standard) AF mode. The speed in contrast AF (LiveView) is about average in the true sense. Full-time manual focusing is supported. Accurate manual focusing a bit tricky though because the focus path is relatively short for a macro lens (about 160 degrees).
As already mentioned there's one differentiator over the old model - OS (Optical Image Stabilization). Sigma claims an efficiency of up to 4 f-stops. This seems about right for non-macro scenes. However, it seemed more like a 2 f-stops improvement for macro work.
Specifications |
Equiv. focal length | 240 mm (full format equivalent) |
Equiv. aperture | f/4.5 (full format equivalent, in terms of depth-of-field) |
Optical construction | 19 elements in 13 groups inc. 3x SLD element |
Number of aperture blades | 9 (circular) |
min. focus distance | 0.38 m (max. magnification ratio ~1:1) |
Dimensions | 80 x 150 mm |
Weight | 1150 g |
Filter size | 72 mm (non-rotating) |
Hood | barrel-shaped, bayonet mount, supplied |
Other features | compatible to EF converters, focus limiter, tripod mount |
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