Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens

      Photo Review 8.5
      -/
      leadpic_Canon_18-135mm

      In summary

      A new 7.5x standard zoom lens that automatically selects the optimum Image Stabiliser mode. Announced at the beginning of September, this new Canon standard zoom lens was designed to complement the EOS 7D body on which we tested it. Providing a focal length range equivalent to 29-216mm in 35mm format, the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS covers both wide enough angles for landscape photography and is narrow enough for portraiture and sports photography. It’s an excellent step-up from the standard kit lens for buyers who would like a longer zoom range. . . [more]

      Full review

      -
      leadpic_Canon_18-135mm

      Announced at the beginning of September, this new Canon standard zoom lens was designed to complement the EOS 7D body on which we tested it. Providing a focal length range equivalent to 29-216mm in 35mm format, the EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS covers both wide enough angles for landscape photography and is narrow enough for portraiture and sports photography. It’s an excellent step-up from the standard kit lens for buyers who would like a longer zoom range.

      The EF-S designation denotes a ‘short’ back-focus design that can only be used on cameras with APS-C sized sensors. Vignetting (edge darkening or cut-off) will occur is the lens is fitted on a full format DSLR body.

      -
      Canon_18-135mm

      Canon’s new EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS lens. (Source: Canon.)

      The optical design uses 16 elements in 12 groups and environmentally friendly lead-free glass is used for all elements. According to Canon, a ‘high-precision’ UD aspheric lens has been included to correct aberrations, while a six-bladed diaphragm closes to a circular aperture for attractive bokeh. Coatings on various elements have been optimised to reduce ghosting and flare.

      Canon claims the built-in stabilisation system provides four f-stops of shutter speed advantage. The system automatically distinguishes between normal shooting and panning shots and selects the optimum stabilisation mode. ‘Optimised’ AF control is another feature, although unlike Canon’s pricier lenses, this lens relies on a gear-driven micro-motor, which is inherently slightly slower and noisier than the ultra-sonic motors on the USM lenses.

      Build quality is a cut above Canon’s budget kit lenses and Canon claims to have ‘improved’ the exterior lens design to provide a ‘high-grade look and feel compared with previous EF-S lenses. A stainless steel mounting plate ensures a secure fit on the camera body long term and the lens feels solid. Internal focusing allows the use of angle-critical attachments like polarisers and graduated filters.

      The focusing ring is a 12 mm wide band near the front of the lens barrel. It has a finely-ridged rubber coating that provides a secure grip. No support is provided for full-time manual focusing and the lens lacks a distance scale.

      Behind the focusing ring is a 62mm wide zoom ring that has a 35mm thick ridged rubber collar. The trailing edge of this ring is engraved with focal length markings for 18mm, 24mm, 35mm, 50mm, 85mm and 135mm positions. On the 16mm wide section of the barrel behind these engravings are two slider switches, the top one for AF/MF and the lower for switching the stabiliser on and off.

      No zoom lock is provided and none appears necessary as we noticed no tendency for zoom creep in the course of our tests. The lens is supplied with end caps but, in line with Canon’s normal practice for ‘budget’ lenses, no lens hood is provided. (The EW-73B lens hood has an RRP of $59.)

      Handling
      Being designed for the EOS 7D this lens fits the camera body very comfortably and is well balanced in the hands. Both focusing and zoom rings showed no slack yet moved smoothly and positively. The zoom ring moves through approximately 45 degrees of rotation and we found the markings on the lens barrel to be accurate for the indicated focal length settings.

      The inner barrel extends approximately 42 mm as you move the zoom ring from the 18mm position to 135mm. In the process, the maximum and minimum apertures change with focal length as follows:

      Focal length

      Max. aperture

      Min. aperture

      18mm

      f/3.5

      f/22

      24mm

      f/4.0

      f/25

      35mm

      f/4.5

      f/29

      50mm

      f/5.0

      f/32

      85mm

      f/5.6

      f/36

      135mm

      f/5.6

      f/36

      The focusing ring moves through approximately 30 degrees in MF mode, making precise manual focusing less easy than it should be. The ring rotates a little during autofocusing but the front element remains motionless so there’s no problem when angle-critical attachments are in place.

      Performance
      The review lens focused accurately in the AF mode with longer focal length settings, although we experienced some hunting with the longer focal length settings in low light levels. When the viewfinder was used for shot composition, AF speeds were faster than we expected from the geared AF motor and focusing was able to keep pace with the 7D’s burst mode.

      However, in Live View mode the contrast-based AF system on the 7D (and on other Canon cameras) was as slow as we’ve come to expect from Canon’s Live View system. In general, noise levels during autofocusing were acceptably low – although not totally silent.

      The image stabiliser enabled us to use shutter speeds as slow as 1/8 second with a focal length of 60mm, confirming Canon’s claim of four f-stops stabilisation advantage. More than 90% of shots taken in our stabilisation tests were acceptably sharp at between three and four f-stops below the shutter speeds we would expect from an unstabilised lens.

      Imatest showed resolution to be quite variable and revealed considerable edge softening at wide aperture settings. The 35mm focal length produced the highest overall resolution plus reasonably good edge sharpness at aperture settings of f/5.6 and smaller. But even it failed to reach the resolution levels we expected from the 7D sensor.

      Edge and corner softening was quite pronounced with the 18mm focal length setting through most of its aperture range. The longer focal length settings showed reduced resolution at small aperture settings that could be due to diffraction. The graph below shows the results of our Imatest tests.

      -
      EF-S-18-135mm_Res-vs-FL-graph

      Lateral chromatic aberration was mostly in the ‘low’ band, although the 18mm and 135mm focal lengths exhibited ‘moderate’ CA for much of their aperture ranges. Coloured fringing could be seen near the edges of shots when they were enlarged to 100%. In the graph below, the red line marks the border between ‘negligible’ and ‘low’ CA with the green line separating ‘low’ and ‘moderate’ CA.

      -
      EF-S-18-135mm_CA-graph

      Barrel distortion was obvious in shots taken with the 18mm focal length but became relatively insignificant at 24mm. Slight pincushioning became visible at 50mm and moderately noticeable at 135mm. Vignetting (edge and corner darkening) could be seen in open-aperture shots at all focal length settings except 35mm. It was very obvious at both 18mm and 135mm but resolved by closing the aperture down to f/5.6 at 18mm or f/7.1 with the longer focal lengths.
      Backlit subjects were handled very well, with very little loss of contrast due to veiling flare. Bokeh was also quite attractive in close-up shots – although not outstandingly beautiful.

      Buy this lens if:
      – You want an affordable general-purpose lens to match the 7D body.
      – You’d like a lens that requires no readjustment when you fit polarisers and graduated filters.
      Don’t buy this lens if:
      – You require high resolution at all focal lengths, along with good flatness of field.
      – You need close focusing and macro capabilities.

      IMATEST GRAPHS

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0062_YL75_ca
      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0061_YAR29_cpp

       

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0061_YL75_cpp

      SAMPLE IMAGES

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0150_wide

      18mm focal length, ISO 100, 1/512 second at f/8.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0151_42mm

      42mm focal length, ISO 100, 1/400 second at f/8.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0152_135mm

      135mm focal length, ISO 100, 1/400 second at f/8.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0165-fringing

      18mm focal length, ISO 100, 1/60 second at f/12.9.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0165-fringing_crop

      100% enlargement of a section of the above image showing coloured fringing.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0619_vignet-18mm

      Vignetting at 18mm f/3.5.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0622_vignet-35mm

      Vignetting at 35mm f/4.5.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0625_vignet-135mm

      Vignetting at 135mm f/5.6.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0240-IS-test

      Stabiliser test: 60mm focal length, ISO 200, 1/8 second at f/11.

      -
      18-135_IMG_0216

      Stabiliser test: 135mm focal length, ISO 200, 1/40 second at f/5.6.

      -
      18-135mm_IMG_0186

      135mm focal length, ISO 100, 1/40 second at f/9.9.

      Additional image samples can be found with the review of the Canon EOS 7D.

       

      Specifications

      -
      leadpic_Canon_18-135mm

      Picture angle (diagonal): 74 degrees 20 minutes to 11 degrees 30 minutes
      Maximum aperture: f/3.5-f/5.6
      Minimum aperture: f/22-f/36
      Lens construction: 16 elements in 12 groups
      Lens mount: Canon EF-S (for APS-C sensor DSLRs)
      Diaphragm blades: 6 (circular)
      Focus drive: Gear driven by DC motor
      Minimum focus: 45 cm
      Maximum magnification: 0.21x at 135mm
      Filter size: 67 mm
      Dimensions (Diameter x L): 75.4 x 101 mm
      Weight: 455 grams

       

      Retailers

       

      CamBuy

       

      www.cambuy.com.au
      Digital cameras, lenses and accessories with 100% genuine Australian manufacturer’s warranties.
      Ph: (02) 9029 2219

      Camera House

       

      -
      CH_Logo120

      www.camerahouse.com.au
      Ph: 133 686
      The largest speciality photographic retail chain in Australia.

      Camera Pro

       

      www.camerapro.net.au
      CameraPro Pty Ltd
      Suite 607, 180 Queen St, Brisbane 4000
      Tel: 07 3333 2900
      Australian owned and run company based in Brisbane.

      Camerasdirect

       

      -
      CamerasDirect133

      www.camerasdirect.com.au
      Retailer of digital camera equipment and more.
      Secure online shopping and delivery across Australia.
      Ph: 1300 727 056

      Camerastore.com.au

      Camerastore.com.au
      Ph: 1800 155 067

      Camera-Warehouse

       

      -
      camera-warehouse120

      www.camera-warehouse.com.au
      Comprehensive range of digital cameras and accessories online (www.camera-warehouse.com.au) and an online print service (www.royalexpress.com.au).

      Digital Camera Warehouse

       

      www.digitalcamerawarehouse.com.au
      174 Canterbury Road 367 High Street
      Canterbury Northcote
      NSW 2193 VIC 3070
      Ph: 1300 365 220

      Electronics Warehouse

       

      www.electronicswarehouse.com.au
      1300 801 885
      Australian retailer of Vapex rechargeable batteries offering factory direct prices and fast, free shipping Australia wide.

      <

      www.dvdreamtime.com.au

       

      www.paxtons.com.au

      Photographic Equipment & Supplies – Retail & Repairs. Click here for list of stores.

      Ted’s Cameras

       

      -
      Teds-Logo120

      www.teds.com.au

      1800 186 895
      Big range of cameras and photographic products with stores in most states and online.

      Rating

       

      RRP: $849

      Rating (out of 10):

      • Build: 8.5
      • Handling: 8.5
      • Image quality: 8.0
      • Versatility: 9.0
      • OVERALL: 8.5

      Buy