papillon_65
Forum Pro
I guess you haven't used that many on adaptors then. Most of them focus past infinity and when you manually focus you can tell where infinity actually is by focusing past it and back again, thus ensuring your shots are sharp in the far distance. If your lens stops before going past infinity you'll never be quite sure if you actually achieved maximum sharpness. I'm talking about the tolerance on some adaptors and how tiny margins can result in failure. Most adaptors are not built to a tolerance that ensures the infinity mark is actually where it should be, in fact plenty of lenses aren't either, or they are marked incorrectly."... focus past infinity ..."
Infinity focus being defined as the the most distant point to which the lens is supposed to designed to focus. With a simple lens and a FF 35mm sensor this would be the closest point point between the lens and the sensor where the image circle coincides with the corners of the sensor rectangle. Forgive my ignorance but I would expect most lenses to hit a hard stop at that point.
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