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Sigma 150-600mm f/5-6.3 DG OS HSM C (Contemporary) Lens for Canon EF-Mount {95} with TS-71 Tripod Collar/Foot
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$963.00
Sigma 150-600mm f/5-6.3 Contemporary: proven reach for Canon shooters
The 150-600mm focal range on a single Canon EF mount lens covers a lot of ground, from distant wildlife to compressed landscape backgrounds, and Sigma's Contemporary version has earned its place as a go-to option for shooters who want that reach without the price of first-party glass. The optical design runs 25 elements across 15 groups, including 4 FLD and 2 ELD elements for aberration control, and the 9-blade circular diaphragm keeps background rendering smooth at longer focal lengths when subjects have room to separate from their surroundings.
The HSM autofocus system uses a stepping motor with a high-precision magnetic sensor, tracking moving subjects reliably through most of the zoom range. Performance is strongest between 200-500mm, where sharpness holds well even wide open. At 600mm, stopping down to f/8 brings noticeable gains in contrast and detail. The optical stabilizer does real work at the long end, settling the viewfinder quickly when you half-press the shutter. A three-position focus limiter, dual OS modes, and three customizable AF-L buttons give you meaningful control without diving into menus.
At 2,100g, this lens is not a walk-around choice. The zoom ring spans a wide 55mm of barrel space, and the Zoom Torque Switch lets you dial in resistance or lock the barrel at 150mm to prevent creep. The included TS-71 tripod collar is Arca-Swiss-compatible with soft 90-degree rotation stops, so mount-to-tripod transitions stay quick in the field. Weather sealing at the mount, rings, and front cover connection means you can work through changing conditions without babying the glass.
Who It's For
Wildlife and nature photographers working from fixed positions or vehicles get the most from the 225-900mm equivalent reach on APS-C bodies, with the focus limiter keeping acquisition fast on perched or slow-moving subjects. Daytime sports shooters on a budget can put 600mm of reach on a Canon body without the cost of an L-series telephoto. Birders who also shoot close-approach insects or flowers benefit from the 58cm minimum focus distance at 150mm, which gives macro-adjacent framing without swapping lenses. Travel photographers covering safaris or coastal wildlife find the weather sealing and dual-mode OS worth the weight tradeoff.
Key Features
- 150-600mm focal range on Canon EF mount with f/5 maximum aperture at 150mm
- 25-element optical design with FLD and ELD elements for aberration control
- 9-blade circular diaphragm for smooth bokeh rendering
- HSM stepping motor with magnetic sensor autofocus and three-position focus limiter
- Dual OS modes with optical image stabilization effective at 600mm
- TS-71 Arca-Swiss tripod collar with soft 90-degree rotation stops
- Weather sealing at mount, rings, and front cover connection
- 2,100g lens with Zoom Torque Switch to prevent creep
FAQ
- How sharp is this lens across the zoom range?
- Best performance lands between 200-500mm, where sharpness holds well even wide open. At 600mm, stop down to f/8 for noticeable gains in contrast and detail; f/11 brings significant improvement but slows autofocus too much for most wildlife work.
- Does the autofocus keep up with moving subjects?
- The stepping motor with magnetic sensor tracks reliably through most of the zoom range. Performance is good in daylight; occasional near-misses happen at 600mm in low light. Speed dips slightly at very close focus distances and the extreme focal length.
- How much does optical stabilization actually help?
- OS performs well at 600mm, settling the viewfinder quickly when you half-press the shutter. Mode 1 is your default; Mode 2 restricts stabilization to the vertical axis for panned shots. At shorter focal lengths, the benefit is less critical.
- What's the closest focus distance?
- 58cm (23 inches) at 150mm. That gives you macro-like versatility for insects and flowers without swapping glass, though the modest aperture limits subject separation at close range.
- Will the zoom creep on a tripod?
- No. The Zoom Torque Switch lets you lock the barrel at 150mm to prevent creep, dial in resistance for smooth zooming, or run it smooth. The TS-71 tripod collar rotates with soft 90-degree stops, so you stay quick in the field.
- How does the bokeh render?
- The 9-blade circular aperture produces smooth, natural bokeh. Not the cleanest available, but quite good at longer focal lengths when subjects separate well from backgrounds. The f/5-6.3 aperture limits background separation; backgrounds stay distracting unless subjects have real distance from the scene.
- Is weather sealing adequate for changing conditions?
- Sealing covers the mount, focus ring, zoom ring, and front cover connection. Oil-repellent front coating protects the glass. Build quality is rugged enough to work through rain and dust without babying the lens, though it's not weatherproof in extreme conditions.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Focal Length | 150-600mm |
| Max Aperture | f/5 |
| Min Aperture | f/6.3 |
| Mount | Canon EF |
| Filter Size | 95 |
| Includes | TS-71 Tripod Collar/Foot |
This description was generated using AI based on KEH's internal product standards, product expertise, and knowing what customers care about most. While we strive for accuracy, details may vary by individual item.
| Brand Name | Sigma |
|---|---|
| Filter Size | 95mm coarse (1. pitch) |
| Focus Type | Autofocus (lens motor) |
| Lens Mount | Canon EF |
| Lens Type | Telephoto / Long |
| Max Focal Length | 600mm |
| Min Focal Length | 150mm |