StewartR
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At Lenses For Hire we have about 20 copies of the Canon 100-400 Mk II, and we've been astonished at the high breakage rate of the lens hoods. We've had about nine of them break in the last month or so, always in exactly the same way. We think we can see how and why it's happening, and we believe it is a design flaw. I'm trying to get Canon to take it seriously. So if anybody else out there has experienced this, I'd like to know.
Here's a photo of the ET-83D hood. Just inside the rim of the hood there is a relatively complicated assembly which attaches the hood to the lens; I've crudely highlighted it in yellow. This assembly is attached to the main part of the hood using four small screws; I've highlighted them in green.

The design flaw is that the yellow assembly is mounted inside the main part of the hood. This means that, if the front edge of the hood takes a knock whilst the hood is mounted on the lens, the force tends to separate the yellow assembly from the main part of the hood. The four green screws are too flimsy to hold the thing together in these circumstances, so they get ripped out and the hood comes apart. The yellow bit stays attached to the lens and the main part comes off.
Of course, by their very nature lens hoods, and especially those fitted to large telephoto lenses, do tend to take knocks in exactly this way That's exactly what we've seen every time. The green screws rip out and the hood comes apart in two pieces, the yellow bit and the rest.
Has anyone else experienced this?
Here's a photo of the ET-83D hood. Just inside the rim of the hood there is a relatively complicated assembly which attaches the hood to the lens; I've crudely highlighted it in yellow. This assembly is attached to the main part of the hood using four small screws; I've highlighted them in green.

The design flaw is that the yellow assembly is mounted inside the main part of the hood. This means that, if the front edge of the hood takes a knock whilst the hood is mounted on the lens, the force tends to separate the yellow assembly from the main part of the hood. The four green screws are too flimsy to hold the thing together in these circumstances, so they get ripped out and the hood comes apart. The yellow bit stays attached to the lens and the main part comes off.
Of course, by their very nature lens hoods, and especially those fitted to large telephoto lenses, do tend to take knocks in exactly this way That's exactly what we've seen every time. The green screws rip out and the hood comes apart in two pieces, the yellow bit and the rest.
Has anyone else experienced this?
