Sporgon said:I guess you've got some elements out of alignment - "de-centered". Complicated lenses like the 24-70 don't take knocks well, and if you've given it a bang that's probably the cause of the problem, despite what Canon service have said.
I had a 5D that got dropped. Everything was OK except the camera started back focusing, which it hadn't done before. Canon service checked it and said it wasn't out of alignment. I find these problems happen when you have an issue which is great enough to be irritating, but only slight in technical terms.
I think you're right although I was never blown away by the lens' quality even before the knock; before (as indeed after) I've had really nice sharp results with it & occasionally disappointing ones but annoyingly inconsistent enough to pin down the reason. The lens was of course attached to the 6D when it got knocked but I feel the issue is certainly with the lens. I need to use it for a trip in a couple of weeks but after then may contact Canon one more time but I have little faith in their UK repair centre.
Ultimately I think I'll need to get rid & cut my losses. Then I need to decide whether to risk another 24-70 F2.8L MKII, try a 24-105 F4 MKII or perhaps see what reviews are like for the Sigma Art version soon to be released - I rather like the idea of F2.8 and IS...
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