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Canon FX with FL 50mm f/1.8. Canon FL refers to a lens mount standard for 35mm single-lens reflex cameras from Canon. It was introduced in April 1964 with the Canon FX camera, replacing the previous Canon R lens mount. The FL mount was in turn replaced in 1971 by the Canon FD lens mount. FL lenses can also be used on FD-mount cameras.
The R mount was used on Canon's first single lens reflex (SLR) camera. The mount employed a "breech lock" system to attach the lens to the camera body. [1] The R mount was discontinued in 1964 and replaced with the Canon FL lens mount. [2] Many mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras are able to use Canon R lenses via an adapter.
Canon full-frame cameras have used the EF lens mount since 1987. In comparison with that mount, the RF mount's inner diameter is the same at 54 mm. [1] The RF mount's flange focal distance at 20 mm is much shorter than that of the Canon EF and EF-S mounts at 44 mm.
That lens was the Canon EF 75-300mm f/4-5.6 IS USM. Canon in 2001 was the first to create a lens with DO (multi layered Diffractive Optical element) element. That lens was the Canon EF 400mm f/4 DO IS USM. Canon in 2008 created the first lens with SWC technology (Subwavelength Structure Coating). That lens was the Canon EF 24mm f/1.4L II USM.
Canon New FD lens mounting surface.. The FD lens mount is a breech-lock mount, which is a variation of the common triple-flanged bayonet attachment. The advantage of the breech-lock over the bayonet is that neither the contact surfaces between the body and lens, nor the signalling mechanisms, rotate against each other when the lens is mounted.
The EF 35mm f / 1.4L II USM is a successor of the EF 35mm f / 1.4L USM. It was announced at the 27th of August 2015 and is available since October same year. [1] The EF 35mm f / 1.4L II USM lens is the first lens in Canon line up to use a Blue Spectrum Refractive Optics element (BR element) to reduce the chromatic aberration at the blue end of the spectrum. [2]
A couple of later Minolta lenses do have a built-in ultrasonic focus motor (SSM lenses), like other SLR and DSLR systems (i.e. Canon and Nikon), where the AF computer is inside the camera body and there is a digital interface connecting body to an electric motor and the focusing gears built into the lens body.
Canon EF-S 18–135 IS USM lens: Optional on 7D Mark II, 80D, 77D, and 800D. Canon EF-S 18–200mm lens: 50D, optional on 60D; Canon have also marketed twin lens kits, typically with the non IS version of the Canon EF-S 18-55mm lenses and Canon EF 55-200mm lens: A now discontinued lens supplied with earlier cameras such as the 350D. Canon EF 75 ...