When the A77/A65 were introduced, there was much talk about the new object tracking function of these cameras. I, and probably others too, were hoping that this feature would allow smoother tracking and a higher hit-rate on moving objects, such as flying birds, racing cars, or kids.
I am mostly photographing birds hand held, and I have to admit that this feature never worked for me. With my Minolta 400/4.5 on the A77 it seems to me that there is almost no way to make object tracking function properly, not even with a slow flying sea gull at medium distance against a clear blue sky.
First, the object isn't easily being picked up by the tracking sytem - most of the time only after the 3rd or 4th try, by which time the subject is usually about to disappear. To me, the initiating process (AF on the subject, initiating the tracking system, placing the center over the subject, launch the tracking) is too slow and too much prone to errors, made both by me and the camera, while the system doesn't easily pick the object.
Second, the tracking system doesn't track properly. From my experience, the system loses the subject far too easily, even when there is no major distraction in the frame (for example it loses the bird and picks up a cloud). Or, if the subject moves around a bit quickly in the frame due to handholding the camera, the system is also prone to losing it.
Third, tracking precision. Even when a subject was tracked apparently properly, the hit rate is far from being 100%, which sort of makes the whole feature obsolete to me.
All the above applies for "easy subject detection with uncluttered background", while for "subject in front of cluttered background" (bird flying), the system never worked for me, not even once. It was just impossible to make the camera pick the bird instead of the background, and keep focus on it.
So... that is my experience with the eagerly avaited obejct tracking feature - it doesn't work properly for my needs. However, other peoples experiences may differ, and I would be interested in which way, with which lenses and in which situations the system actually DOES work. Certainly, handhelding a screw-driven 400mm lens on a moving subject is not an ideal situation, but what are the situations that the system can be used succesfully? Where does it give an advantage over the normal continous AF-tracking? I'd be interested to hear other photographers' experiences.
qp
I am mostly photographing birds hand held, and I have to admit that this feature never worked for me. With my Minolta 400/4.5 on the A77 it seems to me that there is almost no way to make object tracking function properly, not even with a slow flying sea gull at medium distance against a clear blue sky.
First, the object isn't easily being picked up by the tracking sytem - most of the time only after the 3rd or 4th try, by which time the subject is usually about to disappear. To me, the initiating process (AF on the subject, initiating the tracking system, placing the center over the subject, launch the tracking) is too slow and too much prone to errors, made both by me and the camera, while the system doesn't easily pick the object.
Second, the tracking system doesn't track properly. From my experience, the system loses the subject far too easily, even when there is no major distraction in the frame (for example it loses the bird and picks up a cloud). Or, if the subject moves around a bit quickly in the frame due to handholding the camera, the system is also prone to losing it.
Third, tracking precision. Even when a subject was tracked apparently properly, the hit rate is far from being 100%, which sort of makes the whole feature obsolete to me.
All the above applies for "easy subject detection with uncluttered background", while for "subject in front of cluttered background" (bird flying), the system never worked for me, not even once. It was just impossible to make the camera pick the bird instead of the background, and keep focus on it.
So... that is my experience with the eagerly avaited obejct tracking feature - it doesn't work properly for my needs. However, other peoples experiences may differ, and I would be interested in which way, with which lenses and in which situations the system actually DOES work. Certainly, handhelding a screw-driven 400mm lens on a moving subject is not an ideal situation, but what are the situations that the system can be used succesfully? Where does it give an advantage over the normal continous AF-tracking? I'd be interested to hear other photographers' experiences.
qp