On Thu, 16 Nov 2000, Nathan D Burns wrote:
> I have had much better pictures since I turned the ECF off
> on my A2E.
>
>
> I do not have a antireflective on my glasses.
>
> When using EFC
> I had noticeable difficulty seeing the scene in focus
> through the viewfinder with several lens until I purchased a
> 28-105 and a 100-1.8, both Canon. My focus seems to have
> sharpened up considerably since turning off the ECF.
>
> No one could really explain why.
> Nate
Huh!?!?
For the first line... or did the pictures get better because you've gained
more photography experience?
But what comes to the fact that you have gotten sharper images after
turning ECF of...? well only thing is that either you've made lot's of
user errors when you used ECF (ECF selected slightly wrong point, but you
didn't care to correct it), or you didn't hold your camera as steady
then. The ECF is only a way to select which focusing point the camera
uses. After that the focusing is the same. So there really can not be any
difference in the focusing accuracy with or without ECF.
Best regards,
Hugo.
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** Hugo G�vert **
** [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.hut.fi/~hugo **
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** Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent **
** life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none **
** of it has tried to contact us. -- Calvin. **
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