kfreels wrote in post #14976502
I don't follow you. Can you be more specific? You say that when you press the back button, the IS works. What more are you wanting? Do you mean to say that when you release the button, you expect the IS to shut off?
No I don't expect it to shut off, it feels like it shuts off by me releasing the BBF
Using BBF, when you press the button to focus, the IS will activate. If you don't BBF and you just press the shutter button, the IS will also activate. Either button will activate the IS as long as the IS is in the ON setting on the lens itself.
I guess I have to practice half pressing the shutter button again, thanks
But different lenses have different characteristics when it comes to the IS shutting off. Some lenses will shut off the IS after a second or two after you release the shutter or AF/On button and then will re-engage it at the moment you place your finger on the shutter button. Other lenses will leave the IS on for up to a minute after you release the button before the IS is shut off. Some may be even longer but the longest I have experienced is the SIgma 17-70 f2.8-4 OS Macro that takes a full minute before the IS shuts off. So if you BBF and the IS kicks on and then you spend 30-40 seconds composing and then when you go to press the shutter button you may not hear the IS engage because it never shut off in the first place.
Its a lot less than a split second that I've experienced the IS shutting off
I use the 70-200mm IS 2.8L MKII lens
If you don't think this answers your question, then reply back with some more details such as the camera model, the specific lens and we can do some troubleshooting.
I didn't have the time to try this out in the field, but I was using the 5DMKII at the time