AdamLewis wrote in post #4130390
I think if youre going to use it, you need to not use that focus chart BS.
That's more or less in agreement with my experience. About five iterations of different focus charts and all manners of geometric widgetry, which I admit was fun for the mental gymnastics, the results were extremely frustrating. I finally just printed an ISO 12223 chart at 300 dpi and hung it at the end of a hallway. Not rigorous for sure, but it got results.
However, the most interesting revelation I had was that some lenses will consistently have a slightly sharper image at different MAs depending on weather it was coming from OOF at minimum or OOF at infinity. My 100 2.8 Macro was the easiest to adjust because it didn't take a great deal of experimentation to find that one setting was conspicuously sharper than the others. My 70-200 2.8L IS, in stark contrast, was best at a -4 (or something) when it's focusing out from the minimum limit, but a +4 when coming down from infinity. Even worse, what conclusion am I supposed to make when a 50 1.2L focuses sharpest at +5 from the minimum, but then -5 from infinity, and is worse still at +0 from either? It's things like that which make me suspect this one little MA feature is fabulously complex and is not yet well understood. It might be that I just happen to have a kit with three frustrating lenses in it, but I dunno; I like to know as much as I can about such things.
Another example of a good question is, should this be done at the critical aperture? What about IS? Stuff like that. I guess I'm really saying is that Canon should provide a white paper for features this complex.
All that said, I'd bet real money that 99% of all shooters with all manners of lenses will get good results having never touched that function, just as they did for all the years before it was introduced. I believe that my 70-200 is in the remaining 1%.