Short Back Focus
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Short back focus is Canon Inc.'s descriptor for their EF-S lens. The distance between the rearmost surface of the lens and the sensor plane is shorter than that of a normal Canon EF series lens. A shorter back focus does have some advantages when designing wide-angle lenses, but there's a limit to how short it can be in an SLR lens since it can't be so short that the SLR mirror hits it when it flips up. The lower limit on the size of the mirror depends on the size of the film (or sensor). Medium format SLRs need a big mirror, 35 mm SLRs need a smaller mirror, and SLRs with a digital sensor smaller than a full frame 35 mm frame can use an even smaller mirror. The "S" in EF-S stands for "Short back focus".
Since the sensor in the Canon Digital Rebel is only 15.1×22.7 mm, smaller than the 24×36 mm full frame 35 mm frame size, the SLR mirror can be (and is) smaller, so it can use a lens with a shorter back focus than full frame cameras, hence the EF-S lens [1].
As of March 2007, bodies compatible with EF-S lenses are as follows, in chronological order; note that some bodies are known by different names in different markets:
- Canon EOS 300D/Digital Rebel/Kiss Digital
- Canon EOS 20D and Canon EOS 20Da
- Canon EOS 350D/Digital Rebel XT/Kiss Digital N
- Canon EOS 30D
- Canon EOS 400D/Digital Rebel XTi/Kiss Digital X