Filmlexikon.
Support
EF Mount
Camera · Terms

EF Mount

Murnau AI illustration
canon c70 canon c700 canon c300 canon c500 log n log rf mount flow

EF Mount: Canon's electronic lens mount with 54mm diameter — widely used on cinema cameras due to its extensive lens selection.

Technical Details

The EF Mount utilizes 8 electronic contacts to control aperture, focus, and image stabilization. The bayonet mount has a diameter of 54mm with a flange focal distance of 44.0mm. Canon produces the EF Mount in two variants: EF for full-frame sensors and EF-S for APS-C sensors with a smaller image circle. The purely electronic aperture control is achieved via stepping motors with a precision of 1/8 f-stops. The mount supports lens focal lengths from 8mm fisheye to 1200mm super telephoto.

History & Development

Canon introduced the EF Mount in 1987 with the EOS 650, revolutionizing lens technology through complete electronic integration. In 1993, Canon expanded the system with EF-S for smaller APS-C sensors. With the EOS C300 (2011), the EF Mount became established in professional cinema cameras. In 2018, Canon announced the RF Mount as the successor to the EF Mount, but continues to produce EF lenses for the established market.

Practical Use in Film

Cinema cameras such as the RED Epic, ARRI Alexa Mini, or Canon C500 Mark II use the EF Mount for maximum lens compatibility. "Mad Max: Fury Road" utilized Canon EF lenses on RED Dragon cameras for extreme driving shots. The electronic aperture control allows for seamless exposure ramps during shooting. EF lenses are particularly dominant in the low-budget sector, as photographic lenses are more cost-effective than specialized cine optics.

Comparison & Alternatives

The EF Mount competes with the PL Mount (Positive Lock) for high-end productions and Sony's E-Mount in the mirrorless segment. PL Mount lenses offer more precise mechanical focus markings but cost three to five times as much. Canon's own RF Mount (2018) is gradually replacing the EF system, featuring a 54mm diameter but only a 20mm flange focal distance. Adapters allow EF lenses on RF cameras, but not vice versa. For documentary filmmakers and smaller productions, the EF Mount remains the first choice due to its lens diversity.

More in the lexikon

Related terms

Report an error
From the Filmfarm ecosystem

Understand visual language, budget productions, connect crew.

The Lexikon is part of the Filmfarm ecosystem — alongside budgeting (FilmBalance), an industry magazine (FilmCircus) and crew networking (FilmCall, CrewMesh). One shared vocabulary for the whole production.

FilmFarm FilmRadarComing soonFilmPulseComing soonFilmNumbersComing soonFilmCapitalComing soonFilmLabComing soonFilmBalanceComing soonFilmCircusComing soon