I set the depth of preview button on the front to toggle eye AF on and off. That way if I'm tracking something like a bird and it moves into an area with a busy background i just turn eye AF off with my ring finger and keep tracking. This seems to have solved the issue with water or branches confusing the AF for me. When I can see the eye clearly or the background changes I can turn it back on instantly. And it leaves your thumb free to do whatever else you need to do.How do you set * to animal eye AF? I can only set to eye AF, to choose people or animal priorities via menu.Carlyon pretty much nailed it. AF-On set to spot AF with the * button set to Animal Eye AF tracking. This allows for better overall control of your focus as situations arise.How do you set Two Back Buttons to "animal eye"?Actually, I’ve found that TWO back buttons offer flexibility and the ability to use two focus methods (animal eye and spot) in order to better select and track my subjects. It’s been ground breaking.my friend has the sony a9 and he said he stopped using back button focus.
i was trying to figure out if i would need it on my r5. i had it enabled then i turned off and it seems to be just as fast.
Thanks,
Sid
Sounds like current eye focus priority is people assigned to shutter butter, and it switches to animal eye with BBF.
Otherwise, it's more challenging.
I personally don't like assign Eye AF to BBF. This way cannot move the initial AF point or switch between the eyes for eye AF since your finger (thumb) is occupied.
It can be done by shutter release naturally and it's a waste setting to BBF.
Im still somewhat confused as to how people are setting a button to switch to Spot though, can anyone explain like I'm five?
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