zackiedawg
Forum Pro
I figured it was more the birds closing on you than the ones flying parallel - those are always the most difficult since they do rely on the AF system being able to adjust for them as they close. Certainly this is where the A580 easily beats the NEX - in AF-C mode, I can keep focus on a closing target even going 30-40MPH with a screw drive lens - the NEX focus is nowhere near fast enough to track closing motion like that, so it's more of a focus-once-shoot-focus-again type system you have to use, in AF-S mode rather than AF-C. The A77 though should be OK with AF-C mode - as fast or faster than the A580, even with screw drive.Thanks Justin, very nice photos as usual! Number two is about the situation I'm talking about, which gives me a hard time.
I would definitely have a harder time tracking a raptor diving down for a mouse, or a small sparrow erratically flitting all over the sky after insects - those are the shots I generally stick to the DSLR for.To be fair to the A77 it has to be said that the birds I'm photographing are more often raptors than ducks, flying in more random patterns, and are usually quite far away, which makes it much more confusing for the camera.
That's actually a bit surprising - I wouldn't think the spot focus point would be any different in size than that of my A580, and it does a very good job of isolating a small target against a cluttered background...presuming of course that I do MY job of keeping the focus point on the target.But there are situations where the camera really should focus on the bird (center point right on it), but for some reason picks up only on the background... either because the subject is not big or contrasty enough, or because the background has more clutter to pick up onto than the bird.
One thing I find helps is to keep the aperture as big as you can - the more you can narrow the DOF, the more distinction you can put between the subject and the background - once you acquire on the subject, if the background is completely OOF it makes it a little less likely the camera will jump to focusing on the background at the first tiny miss of the focus point...if the background is not far off enough or blurred enough, then the camera may be tempted to switch to it more quickly.
Another thing I tend to do is make use of the focus hold button. When I'm tracking a small erratic subject like a swallow or swift, which are constantly changing direction and speed, I keep my finger hovering over the focus hold button on my lens...if I sense a sudden directional change occurring that I know I'm not going to be able to keep in frame, or sense the camera attempting to change focus to background because I didn't have the point on target, I press the focus hold which halts the focus activity, and release it when I've got the point on the target again. I'll sometimes use focus hold as the subject takes on a brief straight line or consistent distance to camera, to tell the focus system to 'butt-out' and not attempt to refocus if I stray a bit from the point. In a way, this is like a manual version of what you're describing - it's a way of introducing a delay or pause in the continuous focus, though it's up to you to initiate it.Instead of a not very useful obejct tracking feature it would have been nice to have adjustable focus sensitivity and size in the A77. (But of course that wouldn't sell well in the marketing.) To me, the AF points seem soemtimes too big for precise focusing, and there is no way of keeping the camera from jumping focus on anything passing in the forground (like branches or telphone cables), or nervously going back and forth between the subject and the background, because of the photographer's imprecise tracking. A programable delay in focus aquisition (1 or 2 seconds before jumping to a near/far focus) would be very welcome in this situation.
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Justin
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