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I made the mistake of reading the manual today. I can understand having to turn-off the IS when using the tripod but why when you remove the lens from the camera?
I made the mistake of reading the manual today. I can understand having to turn-off the IS when using the tripod but why when you remove the lens from the camera?
Is a monopod the same as a tripod as far as the rules are concerned? Always unsure if it should be off or not on the monopod...
Same!! Camera always off though.Never disengaged it when taking it off the camera!
I made the mistake of reading the manual today. I can understand having to turn-off the IS when using the tripod but why when you remove the lens from the camera?
Is a monopod the same as a tripod as far as the rules are concerned? Always unsure if it should be off or not on the monopod...
It means, don't remove the lens while the stabilisation system is active, ie whirring quietly if you put your ear close to the lens. Let it switch itself off - which it does in about two seconds of taking your finger off the shutter release. It just means the stabilisation elements are resting in the neutral/off position
That is what I do with other lenses, but the manual for the Sigma says:
Be sure to turn of OS switch to OFF position, before attaching or detaching the lens to the camera. (Their spelling)
Perhaps they are just covering themselves.
Good advice re tripods and monopods.
I suspect the reason Sigma say turn of OS before removing from camera is it may cause issues if the camera is still powered on.
I have never turned OS off but make sure the camera is powered down before removing lenses.
Here is the response from Sigma:
Morning
Thank you for your email.
It is for safety reasons that you are advised to turn off the OS. When the OS is off the unit is locked into place to stop it from moving about in the lens and getting damaged.
Here is the response from Sigma:
Morning
Thank you for your email.
It is for safety reasons that you are advised to turn off the OS. When the OS is off the unit is locked into place to stop it from moving about in the lens and getting damaged.
The amount of times I never turn my cameras off when changing lenses. Oh well must be lucky
<snip>
I turn off my camera when changing lenses but I never turn off the IS/OS.
Why? If cameras weren't proof against something that, they'd be breaking down every five minutes.
Not all lenses work the same way though.Maybe Sigmas are different in this respect.....
Why? If cameras weren't proof against something that, they'd be breaking down every five minutes.
Not all lenses work the same way though.
The Canon 100mm f/2.8 L Macro IS USM has a mechanism whereby the floating IS elements are "parked" and locked when the camera is switched off. If you remove the lens from the camera without switching the camera off, the elements are not parked and the lens makes a very worrying rattling noise when you handle it. We get a *lot* of customers ringing up to say they think there's something wrong with the lens, for this reason, and fortunately the remedy is very simple: attach to camera, switch camera off, detach.
(Just to be clear, I'm *not* talking about waiting for the camera to go to sleep and for the IS to spin down. You have to actively turn the camera off.)
Maybe this Sigma lens has a similar quirk.
I got basically the same reply from Sigma UK, but they were unable to tell me what actually happens when you physically switch off the OS, as opposed to just letting itself power down automatically, a couple of seconds after taking your finger off the shutter release, like other brands. Maybe Sigmas are different in this respect, in which case that would be a drawback in practise, at least in theory. Or maybe not - it could be something as simple as a historical translation issue that has never been corrected - currently awaiting a reply from Sigma Japan.