On Dec 29, 2010, at 12:47 PM, steve harley wrote:

> On 2010-12-29 08:30 , Eric Weir wrote:
>> 
>> On Dec 27, 2010, at 6:24 PM, steve harley wrote:
>>> 3) you've got a problem with the focus and/or the lens
> 
>> I wonder about lenses. I haven't attempted to evaluate any of them in this 
>> connection -- and how would I know, in any given instance, that the problem 
>> was with the lens? -- but I've tried to pick lenses that have a reputation 
>> for producing sharp images and avoiding those that do not. My collection: A 
>> 28/2.8, M 50/1.7, A 50/2.0, M 100/4.0 macro, 2 M 135/3.5s, and one A 
>> 70-210/4.0.
> 
> well, it could be the lens, but if the image appears very sharp in the 
> viewfinder, but comes out blurry, your camera may be back- or front-focusing 
> (viewfinder not properly coordinated with the actual focus on the sensor); 
> some simple tests on a tripod can confirm that (the classic is to prop up a 
> yardstick at 45 degrees and focus on the 18" mark)

As mentioned before, I'm not experiencing a lot of success getting sharply 
focused images. [Though I have a shot of a mural on the end of a row of row 
houses in Pittsburgh shot from a moving car that's among the sharpest I've 
gotten.] Finally got around to doing the test Steve suggested. Used an M 
135/3.5 lens wide open on a tripod about six or seven feet from the yardstick. 
Focusing on the 18" mark both the 18" and 16" were in focus. 

That fact makes me wonder if this was an effective test of whether my camera 
[*ist DS] is front- or back-focusing. If it were not, if it were focusing 
properly, shouldn't the image appear out of focus as you move away from the 
focus point?

This has me thinking about spit image focus screens again, though I am 
reluctant to go that route until I'm certain that all options that don't 
involve aids have been exhausted.

Need to continue monitoring it to be sure, but having turned the view finder 
focus indicator back on my sense when checking it is that images come into 
focus for me a little ahead of the "in focus" focus indicator.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Weir
Decatur, GA  USA
[email protected]





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