maybe this is a quick answer but i did tim jacksons focus test with my new 70-200 f4 and at 135mm its dead on and very sharp...but at 200mm the focus is back 10mm or so...anyone know whats going on?
willg Senior Member 895 posts Joined Mar 2005 Location: Decatur, IL More info | May 19, 2005 19:03 | #1 maybe this is a quick answer but i did tim jacksons focus test with my new 70-200 f4 and at 135mm its dead on and very sharp...but at 200mm the focus is back 10mm or so...anyone know whats going on? 5D, 300D, Tamron 17-35mm f/2.8-4, Canon 70-200mm f/4, 135mm f/2, 24-105mm f/4, 50mm f/1.4, Sigma ef 500 dg super, Canon 580EX
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tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | May 19, 2005 19:46 | #2 Can you post shots of your test chart at 70, 135, and 200mm? Make sure you use a tripod for all the shots. Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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tim wrote: Can you post shots of your test chart at 70, 135, and 200mm? Make sure you use a tripod for all the shots. ok so i don't really trust them because i didnt set it up very well, but what i do trust is the following picture...you can clearly see how the focus is off...it was handheld but the shutter was pressed immediately after i heard the focus beep and i used a flash
5D, 300D, Tamron 17-35mm f/2.8-4, Canon 70-200mm f/4, 135mm f/2, 24-105mm f/4, 50mm f/1.4, Sigma ef 500 dg super, Canon 580EX
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tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | May 19, 2005 20:22 | #4 You can't do focus testing like that, please use a focus test chart. You can find one here Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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tim wrote: You can't do focus testing like that, please use a focus test chart. You can find one here http://md.co.za/d70/chart.html ok thanks...i am just worried i won't set it up exactly at 45 degrees and all that...i will do it seriously tomorrow with daylight and a yard stick to make sure its as close to 45 degrees as possible 5D, 300D, Tamron 17-35mm f/2.8-4, Canon 70-200mm f/4, 135mm f/2, 24-105mm f/4, 50mm f/1.4, Sigma ef 500 dg super, Canon 580EX
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TomW Canon Fanosapien 12,749 posts Likes: 30 Joined Feb 2003 Location: Chattanooga, Tennessee More info | willg wrote: ok so i don't really trust them because i didnt set it up very well, but what i do trust is the following picture...you can clearly see how the focus is off...it was handheld but the shutter was pressed immediately after i heard the focus beep and i used a flash
I may be way off base here, but I cannot clearly see whether the focus is off or not. There is a lot of depth to the target, all of which can fall under the actual focus sensor (which is actually a good deal bigger than the size of the indicator square in the viewfinder). I think that your focus sensor found a good, contrasty boundary in the center of the flower, which seems to be in very good focus. Tom
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ed2day Senior Member 633 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: Boulder, CO More info | May 20, 2005 10:29 | #7 I don't think it's that critical that you be exactly 45 deg. That just affects the calibration numbers on the scale. If you're 5 deg. off, maybe 2 mm is really 2.2 mm(on both sides of zero, i.e. things are still centered). So what? There are things that must be tightly controlled, that's not one of them far as I can see. But using a tripod is critical. And some kind of remote shutter release. The red square is not necessarily where the camera focused. It's where the AF point winds up when the shutter opens--focus is locked when you hear the beep so any movement between them will mislead you. And the fact that you are trying to press the shutter release as soon as you hear the beep makes movement likely.
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ed2day wrote: it's just another sanity check
and to see the full frame:
5D, 300D, Tamron 17-35mm f/2.8-4, Canon 70-200mm f/4, 135mm f/2, 24-105mm f/4, 50mm f/1.4, Sigma ef 500 dg super, Canon 580EX
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lancea Senior Member 720 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 01:17 | #9 This is an interesting thread - but I presume the "naughty naughty" icons have been put there by a moderator to replace embedded images that were too large. Any chance of updating your postings with links to the shots? Thanks. Olympus C-50 Zoom; Canon PowerShot G9; EOS 20D; EOS 5D Mark II
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tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 01:20 | #10 Nah they're hotlink protection lancea - right click, view image, reload and you'll see them. They look sharp enough to me. Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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lancea Senior Member 720 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 02:05 | #11 Hmm. That doesn't work for me. I've tried IE 6, Firefox and Opera 8. Not a sausage. The only way I can see the image is if I view the page source and get the URL from it. From my 5 minute mastering of hotlink protection Olympus C-50 Zoom; Canon PowerShot G9; EOS 20D; EOS 5D Mark II
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tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 02:10 | #12 Hotlink protection is done on the target server using the referrer URL. My sites are all hotlink protected, excepting specific directories which i've unprotected so I can post pics here easily. Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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lancea Senior Member 720 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 02:43 | #13 Thanks for that. Doesn't work in Opera and even a multi-step process in Firefox. That'd drive me nuts! One way to keep people from linking I suppose ... Olympus C-50 Zoom; Canon PowerShot G9; EOS 20D; EOS 5D Mark II
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gcogger Goldmember 2,554 posts Likes: 1 Joined Mar 2003 Location: Southampton, UK More info | May 21, 2005 04:13 | #14 You're not the only one - I can't get to the images either... Graeme
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lancea Senior Member 720 posts Joined Jan 2005 Location: New Zealand More info | May 21, 2005 04:26 | #15 Thanks gcogger. It's never a good feeling when you think you're the only one! All I can say is that "hotlink protection" works very well Olympus C-50 Zoom; Canon PowerShot G9; EOS 20D; EOS 5D Mark II
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