Compatible Lenses
The 1.4× II Extender is designed for Canon’s L-series telephoto primes and zooms, plus select other L-class optics with recessed rear elements:
• Telephoto & Super-Telephoto Primes:
• EF 135 mm f/2 L
• EF 180 mm f/3.5 L Macro
• EF 200 mm f/1.8 L
• EF 200 mm f/2 L IS
• EF 200 mm f/2.8 L II
• EF 300 mm f/2.8 L (IS & non‑IS)
• EF 300 mm f/4 L (IS & non‑IS)
• EF 400 mm f/2.8 L (IS & II)
• EF 400 mm f/4 L DO IS
• EF 400 mm f/5.6 L
• EF 500 mm f/4 L IS (I & II)
• EF 600 mm f/4 L IS (I & II)
• EF 800 mm f/5.6 L IS
• Telephoto Zooms:
• EF 70‑200 mm f/2.8 L IS USM (all versions)
• EF 70‑200 mm f/4 L IS USM
• EF 100‑400 mm f/4.5‑5.6 L IS USM (Generations I & II)
• Tilt‑Shift Lenses (manual focus only, no autofocus):
• EF TS‑E 17 mm f/4 L
• EF TS‑E 24 mm f/3.5 L
• EF TS‑E 45 mm f/2.8
• EF TS‑E 90 mm f/2.8
🔍 Why Compatibility Matters
• The extender’s front element protrudes, so only lenses with recessed rear optics are safe to pair. Using incompatible lenses risks damaging both the lens and extender .
• Autofocus and image stabilization functionality vary depending on the lens.
• With the zooms listed above, you’ll retain IS and AF, though AF may drop to a single central point on DSLR bodies.
📸 Autofocus & Aperture Impact
• Using the 1.4× extender reduces the maximum aperture by 1 stop (e.g., f/2.8 → f/4; f/4.5 → f/6.3) .
• On many EOS DSLRs, if your effective aperture drops below f/5.6, autofocus may be lost—unless your camera supports AF at f/8 (like the EOS‑1D series, 5D Mark IV, 7D Mark II, and others) .
• On modern EOS R-series mirrorless, autofocus generally works even at smaller apertures thanks to Dual Pixel CMOS AF ().

 Canon 52mm Official Camera Of The Football World Cup 1982 Lens Cap
Canon 52mm Official Camera Of The Football World Cup 1982 Lens Cap						



 
				




 
				
 
				



