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Sigma EX - Converter APO - Canon EF
 
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Sigma EX - Converter APO - Canon EF

by Sigma
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
Price: £220.99
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In stock.
Dispatched from and sold by Luzern.
Only 5 left in stock--order soon.


Technical Details

  • APO TELE

Product details

  • Item Weight: 236 g
  • Boxed-product Weight: 386 g
  • Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered.
    Find out more about our Delivery Rates and Returns Policy
  • Item model number: B000CD8BIS
  • ASIN: B000CD8BIS
  • Date first available at Amazon.co.uk: 29 Sep 2006
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

Product Description

Sigma EX 2,0x APO-Konverter DG C/AF for Canon


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Dissapointed 9 Aug 2011
I have this on my sigma 150-500mm. It has several things that I don't like. Firstly, there is no white or red dot to aid lining it up when putting on the body, which as this makes for a rather unbalanced and unwieldy combination is not helpful.
The loss of exposure was worse than I had expected : the 150-500 on its own is F6.3, but with this attached something odd happens: If the lens is set to 150 (therefore 300mm with this) then you get F10. If you then extend the lens to 500 mm (therefore 1000mm) then its F13. This makes it extremely hard to use, especially without auto-focus. Finally, and this is really unexpected, the camera doesn't even beep to say when you have focus lock. This is rather unnerving, and seems to be uniquely due to this product.. your on your own with this.

You really should think hard about it before you buy this. If your subject doesn't move much then it maybe helpful, otherwise I think you will find this as frustrating as I have so far..
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  33 reviews
88 of 92 people found the following review helpful
Sigma 2X EX DG APO Teleconverter for Nikon AF Cameras 16 Feb 2007
By T. Spencer - Published on Amazon.com
After reading the two reviews above, I was somewhat baffled. If you do any research on this product, you will find it clearly is made only for use with Sigma lenses, not Nikon lenses. The instruction manual that comes with the converter even lists which specific Sigma lenses to use. If you want a converter for Nikon lenses, buy the Nikon TC-20E (retails for more than twice the Sigma). Of course the quality of this product is poor when using a Nikon lens! I have a Sigma 70-200 zoom and it works beautifully; it is well worth the price.
56 of 60 people found the following review helpful
Useful enhancement, within reason 21 May 2009
By Photoleif - Published on Amazon.com
First, to set things straight: this TC is intended for only Canon cameras, and for Sigma lenses that mount on a Canon camera. Anything else, you're taking your chances. Second, there are optical laws that invariably predict a 2-stop decrease in the amount of light hitting the sensor. And finally, glass, no matter which brand or how many exotic elements in it, has undesirable characteristics and you will always lose some amount of clarity, saturation and perceived quality (how much varies from lens to lens and eye to eye).

Now that those fundamentals are out of the way, the results and recommendations. I took several photos using this TC mounted on my Sigma 70-200/2.8 and my Sigma 150-500/5.6~6.3. I also attempted to mount my Canon 28-70/2.8L on it, but the fit did not work (it scrapes and sticks and will not lock into place), and thus I believe they are incompatible. I did not test it with my Sigma 10-20/4.5~5.6 for obvious reasons.

AF is maintained throughout the entire range of the 70-200/2.8, as advertised in Sigma's compatibility chart. MF is engaged electronically for the entire range on the 150-500/5.6~6.3, again per the chart. AF through the 70-200 is solid, accurate, and has no degradation of speed. MF through the 150-500 @ 500 is, as one should understand, a touchy process, though it's aided considerably by the optical stabilization function.

Image quality @ 500mm (really, 1000mm) is not spectacular (though what does one expect, given a maximum aperture of about f/12.9). I didn't expect wonders but I had hopes of better. Some of this is inevitably due to my challenge in focusing, which is difficult without a split-prism finder. The image quality is still fairly bright and saturated, but somewhat noisy-looking. Exposure was accurate. I need to test on monochromatic surfaces to determine what's going on with the noise.

Tripod-mounting the camera, lens and TC for the 1000mm (500mm doubled) test shots produced the best results, improving further with MLU enabled and use of an IR remote. Image quality @ 400mm (200mm doubled) is acceptable and this should be the recommended pairing of lens and teleconverter (70-200/2.8 with this TC). This pairing results in a decent-quality 400/5.6 for well below the price of Canon's prime and zoom lenses in this range. I won't claim that the image quality is better; just, it's decent, and you save a lot of money.

Build quality of the TC is fine and nothing is worth further comment other than that it's a solid, well-built TC with multicoated elements.

I wavered between a 3-star and 4-star rating. I have owned two other TCs, and they were unquestionably 1-star at best. I went with four for this one because of its good performance with the 70-200/2.8, maintaining AF with that lens, and having pleasing build quality (I have no concerns about taking it out and using it frequently). I am however disappointed about the performance with the 150-500/4.5~5.6. I would give it a 3-star for its performance with the 150-500. I think it should at least attempt AF, and if the user has to give up and set it to MF, fine. Here, we don't even have that luxury, and there's no explanation on Sigma's website or the product literature. So, if you are considering this to get yourself a cheap 1000mm lens, be aware of the drawbacks (full-time MF, somewhat noisy images, and challenging focusing in even overcast light). If you're wanting to extend a 70-200, this is the sweet-spot.
24 of 26 people found the following review helpful
Very pleased 2 May 2008
By Ronnie Phipps - Published on Amazon.com
I got this 2x converter to match the Sigma 70/200 2.8 lens. I have shot around 100 pics with this set up and have been very pleased with the results. I have shot wildlife to school track meets.
The only reason I couldn't give this converter a perfect mark is I can't use it with my other Nikon lens.
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