So those imperfections on the 10-22 are too much to take and I even cleaned the lens so I am gonna have to try and return the thing now. What a pain.
Are you talking about the little specs and splotches I'm seeing in the blue sky??
If that's what you're talking about, that HAS to be dirt on your sensor, man. Don't return the lens just yet.
Does the 30D have the self-cleaning sensor unit? Might be on the 40D and not the 30D....
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_P8_LNmpFSc]YouTube - Canon EOS Integrated Cleaning System[/ame]
If not, try following the procedure that appears on pages 41 and 42 of the EOS 30D manual. Of course, that's if you haven't already tried that. I'd suggest you hold the camera with the opening pointed downward while you blow air into the camera to dislodge the dust from the low-pass filter.
The following is some dur-hey type stuff you probably already know. Here, for the benefit of those who don't...
DO NOT USE CANNED AIR!! If you let a little liquid out of the canned air cylinder into the innards of the camera, you're going to have a bad time.
DO NOT BLOW INTO THE CAMERA WITH YOUR MOUTH!! The water-vapor in your breath will do bad things to the innards of the camera.
Use only a bulb-blower.
After that, test it out by putting a lens back on it and pointing it at a flat-white wall and taking a picture with the wide lens. You might have to repeat the above steps a couple times to get all the dust particles off the low-pass filter.
Worst case is you take it to an authorized Canon repair facility and have it professionally cleaned. Maybe $30 or so.
After you finally get things cleaned out, make sure you turn your camera off before switching lenses (this ensures there's no static charge on the sensor to attract dust), keep the opening of the camera pointed downward as you change lenses, make sure the lens you're about to put on is dust-free, and don't change lenses in dusty environments.
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