Massao
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Senior Member
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Posts: 2,580
Re: Is there life after aperture block failure?
Oiche wrote:
Massao wrote:
peterpainter wrote:
Massao wrote:
peterpainter wrote:
Thanks - yes, will keep an eye out for one. I'm sure I'd survive without focus-peaking if I had to!
Focus peaking is particularly useful with a camera with tilting/articulating screen. However, focus confirmation via OVF is much more accurate (though only works with center AF point..at least on my K-30).
I'm not entirely convinced by focus confirmation through the OVF. Admittedly that is based on my use a long time ago of an F1.8 lens which has a very narrow DOF at f1.8 but the focus confirmation on my old MZ50 gave it a much wider range. More modern gear may be better, but I don't think that focus points are accurate enough for very wide apertures, although I'd be happy to be corrected here.
I guess the technology as changed a lot. This could be model-dependent issue, but in K-30 I find the focus confirmation in OVF much more reliable then focus peaking.
How can focus peaking be unreliable or not accurate? It's the users fault if you don't get it right and not the camera.
It can very well be. I've had too many failed macro shots with focus peaking--indeed, those with f/2.8 aperture which is not a forgiving setting either, so now I try to use the OVF more and more Situations like focusing on a particular part of flower...focus peaking seems to surprise me with results But in situations when my forhead gets tired, or angles that are impossible or very difficult to put an eye on OVF, I use focus peaking..but try to close down the aperture to allow for any mistake in focus accuracy:-)
BTW I couldn't have got the shots as good without the flippy screen and magnified focus peaking, therefore using old cameras without fully articulated screens nor focus peaking would have been a handicap resulting in lesser pleasing images. These are features which you have to use first to really understand, appreciate and use them to good effect going by my own experience and I'm not the first to jump at new tech.
Certainly. It is a great option, particularly for using tele lenses. I've been enjoying focus peaking with my Soligor 400mm f/6.3. Its quite fun and easy to capture images. Putting an eye to such a tele lens is absolutely hopeless :-D. I'd be searching forsubject more often then focusing if I use OVF. Haha
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Kind regards,
Massao
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First camera: Canon FTB; First autofocus SLR camera: Pentax; First Nikon: F601 (N6006); First digital camera: Sony DSC-W5; First DSLR: Nikon D70; First mirrorless ICL camera: Samsung nx11