Well explained As you point this out about front focusing it is as canon has and has always stated as far as I have always read in there manuals and white papers. The focusing will always focus to the nearest point.
This is easy to demonstrate I dont have the 7D but imagine it has a center point expansion area. If you use for macro center point and accidently have the center point expansion points on it will almost always front focus if pointing the lens at a flattish surface in a downward angle. Switch to center point alone and its as if it is a different focusing system ( which it is) and it will be spot on.
There is a lot more than to photography than buying an expensive camera , pointing it at something , having a rough idea or a guess at what settings are needed and hoping.
If you are using a camera and know exactly what setting you need in a given situation (as an experienced or trained photographer does know) and then things are not as they thought they where then something maybe amiss.
If before you are not sure of the exact result you will get then you are still learning and must expect and will get erratic results, which is fine and it is great to keep learning.
Tests that are shown here are more than dubious and do need to be taken as a bit of fun and a huge pick of salt .
It is always worth at first to err on the side that it may be user error unless you are very experience or had several years training
This is easy to demonstrate I dont have the 7D but imagine it has a center point expansion area. If you use for macro center point and accidently have the center point expansion points on it will almost always front focus if pointing the lens at a flattish surface in a downward angle. Switch to center point alone and its as if it is a different focusing system ( which it is) and it will be spot on.
There is a lot more than to photography than buying an expensive camera , pointing it at something , having a rough idea or a guess at what settings are needed and hoping.
If you are using a camera and know exactly what setting you need in a given situation (as an experienced or trained photographer does know) and then things are not as they thought they where then something maybe amiss.
If before you are not sure of the exact result you will get then you are still learning and must expect and will get erratic results, which is fine and it is great to keep learning.
Tests that are shown here are more than dubious and do need to be taken as a bit of fun and a huge pick of salt .
It is always worth at first to err on the side that it may be user error unless you are very experience or had several years training
I've done some testing since I got my 7D, and I can confirm that using all focus points (something I would never do in normal use), I get erratic results as well. The camera seems able to pick up objects well outside of the obvious focus area and locks onto them, putting the desired focus off.
In my case I was focusing on a box sitting on the carpet, and although all of the focus points that lit up were on the box, it consistently focused a few inches in front on the carpet.
Focusing on the nearest object is fairly standard behaviour, and both my 40D and 7D manuals mention it when using all focus points, but I'm not sure if this ability to pick up objects so far away from the focus area is new to the 7D.
My own opinion is that this is a major cause of the problems that people are complaining about when they are using all focus points - I've seen a lot of photos that appear to be severely front-focused.
That's not to say that I don't believe that there are some faulty 7D cameras around as well, just that the more inexperienced (not trying to be patronising) user may get caught out when using all focus points.