Re: Easy, EF-M 22mm f/2.0
MyM3 wrote:
Casey Cheung wrote:
nnowak wrote:
Casey Cheung wrote:
nnowak wrote:
Yes, the AF mechanism is a bit slow, noisy, and fragile. Yes, the vignetting is pretty high and the corners are soft wide open. Yes, the Canon hood is an extra expense and is worthless. It is not an "L" lens, very far from it.
But, none of that matters. This is the closest thing to a universal lens in the lineup. It is the smallest and lightest lens which makes carrying it very easy. It is one of the least expensive lenses in the lineup. The 32mm f/1.4 and the 22mm f/2.0 are the only two lenses I would consider using indoors in low light. However, the 22mm focal length means you are much less likely to literally get backed into a corner than with the 32mm. The minimum focus distance is only 15cm. Even wide open, the center is quite sharp.
The image quality is good enough and it is the only lens in the lineup that I know I could take anywhere in the world, at any time, and get a very good photo. Some of the other lenses are nice too, but they are either too dim and/or the focal lengths would put my back against a wall.
I'm curious. Is the 22mm f2 lens really slow for auto focus and noisy? Is the 22mm lens slower in focus compared to the 15-45mm kit zoom lens?
Yes
Is the 22mm lens noisy enough for the focusing sound to be recorded in video either with the internal mic
Yes
or an external mic?
Maybe
I'm considering getting the 22mm lens so that's why I'm interested. Thanks!
The 22mm is not awful in any of these regards, but it is not as fast or quiet as the other EF-M lenses.
Another question on the 22mm f2 lens please. What is the closest focusing distance of this lens? I'm hoping to use it as a ghetto macro lens, lol.
It is 0.15m/0.49ft
Aah, thank you. I had to do a Google search to convert meters to inches, which comes out to 5.90 inches. At 5.90 inches closest focusing distance, that's not exactly very close, but not bad either. I was reading a review earlier that the 24mm Canon lens can focus within a couple inches, but that requires an adapter. My facts and memory could be wrong, by the way.