Originally Posted by
Tannin
Kev, I spend most of my photography time in the deep outback: deserts and near-deserts. Dust is a fact of life for me. I used to have frequent trouble with dust on sensors. (This was back in the day before self-cleaning sensors came along.) In fact, sensor dust was one of the two or three main reasons I switched from being a one-body man to a two-body man: simply to avoid lens swaps in constantly dusty environments. (And then a three-body man. Sigh. After that the rot set in and I got a bit carried away. These days I have take medication for the problem and have trimmed myself back to a mere four at any one time. I can handle it. I can stop any time I like.)
Um ... as I was saying, dust used to be a big problem, but I seldom give it a thought these days. I honestly can't remember the last time I had to clean dust of a sensor. Years, certainly. Granted, most of my lenses are weather-sealed, but the 100-400 certainly isn't, and although I generally dedicate one camera to the 500/4, I still remove the lens frequently to add or remove a teleconverter. The EF 100-400 is notorious among Canon users (at least the sort that post on Internet fora) for being a "dust pump". They whinge and moan about it the way a dog whinges if you leave him tied up and alone all day.
What actual effect does the dust the 100-400 "pumps" have on picture quality? None. Nada. Zip. Nil. Zero. The theory tells us that any reasonable amount of dust inside the lens makes practically no difference. I've owned two different 100-400 "dust pumps", used one or the other of them under harsh, dusty conditions for ... er ... 12 years now, taken tens of thousands of pictures with them. Lens dust is a non issue.
Dust on your sensor is the only dust you have to worry about - 'cause that does impact image quality - and with modern sensors, that's pretty much a non-issue too.
Do you remember that famous Lens Rentals article where they tested a lens with a massive great crack in the front element? It really made the point.