Pete Stone
Active member
You certainly COULD have hunting problems if the camera thinks the AF position is shifting, despite how the lens tries to achieve AF ( via pulse detection or any other means ).
Pete
Pete
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David,
Two cameras with exactly the same problem? One supposidly
calibrated by Canon and the same problem still? This is really
strange. What rotten luck. My D60 seems to focus perfectly.
I think your test may have been a little flawed for two reasons.
Handholding certainly leads to a small (but real) change in
distance between the focus point and the sensor plane between the
time of focus lock (half shutter press) and the time of image
capture, not to mention any camera movement due to the mirror flip.
Crouching also is a very difficult position to hold really steady.
Second, the angle between your camera and the tape can only lead to
enhanced possibilities for experimental error. It would certainly
be hard for you and/or the focus sensor to decide on exactly
where the focus point is supposed to be, because of the angle.
I would suggest trying the "carpet" test. Keep your focus object
exactly perpindicular to the ruler, carpet, or whatever you are
using to judge front/rear focus. Also, keep your camera/sensor
plane exactly in normal incidence with the focus object.
I tried a test this a.m., shown here. Best I can tell, my D60 is
spot on in focus. Zoom in and check out the carpet just to the
right of the bottom of the cereal box. I focused on the small
print just above "Ingredients". Note that this is a jpg image, so
the small text is a little distorted, but you can clearly see from
the carpet where the focus plane is - it seems to be exactly where
it should be... the front plane of the box.
http://www.pbase.com/image/3077764
--Thus if the lens is a little out of whack, an active feedback
control system will null out any mismatch error with the lens... it
will keep pulsing the lens until focus is achieved (minimizing the
error).
If the system was open-loop, as you describe, accurate focus across
many lenses would be hopeless... there is no way to control
manufacturing tolerances to those levels.
It is highly unlikely that this is a lens-camera combination
problem. The only way one can imagine the lens causing this
problem is if it has an electronics problem causing the stepper
motor to oscillate between front and rear focus... thus a lens
failure, not a combination failure.
What I'm saying is that maybe the 50 1.4 lens is off, and the D60
camera body is fine. I'd check it with some other fast lenses. It
would also be interesting to check the camera/lens combo at
infinity to see what the lens indication is ( how far off the mark
is the inf. mark on the barrel ). Possibly the CMOS sensor is off,
but Canon's check on the AF sensor distance reads as OK. Pete.
http://www.petestone.com
--Pete - you are pointing out that both the lens aned the body needRead my post for a possible cause:
http://www.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1019&message=3019725
to be sent in for adjustment.
I think that the interface between the camera and the lens is what
is the Canon standard/specification is, and both the body and the
lens need to follow it. Consider what would happen if you have a
set of lenses and 2 bodies - which pair would you adjust ? Buying
a new lens would possibly cause a new "readjustment" of the body,
which would then cause problems with the other lenses in the set.
The treatment of the body and lens as a pair seems an unworkable
solution.
Paul.
--You may think so. Canon does not. They tested the body using a VERYI think your test may have been a little flawed for two reasons.
similar technique, found it to be out of spec and adjusted it. I
have to assume it left both the Canon factory and CPS in perfect
adjustment. It appears to be falling out of adjustment during
shipping. That is THIER opinion at the moment.
By the way, I only did the test after I noticed that all of the
pictures I had taken appeared to be out of focus. The problem is
with the camera/lens, not the test.
David Jay
pete stone
pete stone
pete stone
--Thus if the lens is a little out of whack, an active feedback
control system will null out any mismatch error with the lens... it
will keep pulsing the lens until focus is achieved (minimizing the
error).
If the system was open-loop, as you describe, accurate focus across
many lenses would be hopeless... there is no way to control
manufacturing tolerances to those levels.
It is highly unlikely that this is a lens-camera combination
problem. The only way one can imagine the lens causing this
problem is if it has an electronics problem causing the stepper
motor to oscillate between front and rear focus... thus a lens
failure, not a combination failure.
What I'm saying is that maybe the 50 1.4 lens is off, and the D60
camera body is fine. I'd check it with some other fast lenses. It
would also be interesting to check the camera/lens combo at
infinity to see what the lens indication is ( how far off the mark
is the inf. mark on the barrel ). Possibly the CMOS sensor is off,
but Canon's check on the AF sensor distance reads as OK. Pete.
http://www.petestone.com
--Pete - you are pointing out that both the lens aned the body needRead my post for a possible cause:
http://www.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1019&message=3019725
to be sent in for adjustment.
I think that the interface between the camera and the lens is what
is the Canon standard/specification is, and both the body and the
lens need to follow it. Consider what would happen if you have a
set of lenses and 2 bodies - which pair would you adjust ? Buying
a new lens would possibly cause a new "readjustment" of the body,
which would then cause problems with the other lenses in the set.
The treatment of the body and lens as a pair seems an unworkable
solution.
Paul.
--You may think so. Canon does not. They tested the body using a VERYI think your test may have been a little flawed for two reasons.
similar technique, found it to be out of spec and adjusted it. I
have to assume it left both the Canon factory and CPS in perfect
adjustment. It appears to be falling out of adjustment during
shipping. That is THIER opinion at the moment.
By the way, I only did the test after I noticed that all of the
pictures I had taken appeared to be out of focus. The problem is
with the camera/lens, not the test.
David Jay
pete stone
pete stone
pete stone
What you describe below (a lens malfunction) is different from what
you described in your original post (a manufacturing mismatch
between body and lens). Certainly, an USM lens can have focus
malfunctions, one possible scenario was in my post... I'm sure
there are others. A modern AF lens is a very complicated piece of
equipment.
What I was disagreeing with was your description of how focus is
achieved as an explanation for the problem which started this
thread... and the statement that a lens/body must somehow be
calibrated together to account for manufacturing variances. This
could cause readers to unnecessarily send in camera and lenses for
"calibation".
I would agree that the original poster could have a malfunctioning
lens. This seems even more likely since he sees the same problem
on two D60s and after repair... all with the same lens. However, I
think he just needs to have the lens repaired/replaced, not have it
calibrated/adjusted to his body. That was my only point.
Pete,
I agree that there might be someting wrong in the lense that cause
the focus failed, as the closed AF system gives up after several
attempts.
Here I have something I just wonder:
20 hours life for the USM motor? (you said in your post)
= 72000 secs
Every picture might take about 3 times for focus lock and composing.
Each time of focusing probably takes about a sec (if not hunting)
so with 72000 secs you can take probably 72000 / 3 = 24000 pictures
If you take 200 pics a day, that's gonna be 120 days less than a year?
Thanh
--Thus if the lens is a little out of whack, an active feedback
control system will null out any mismatch error with the lens... it
will keep pulsing the lens until focus is achieved (minimizing the
error).
If the system was open-loop, as you describe, accurate focus across
many lenses would be hopeless... there is no way to control
manufacturing tolerances to those levels.
It is highly unlikely that this is a lens-camera combination
problem. The only way one can imagine the lens causing this
problem is if it has an electronics problem causing the stepper
motor to oscillate between front and rear focus... thus a lens
failure, not a combination failure.
What I'm saying is that maybe the 50 1.4 lens is off, and the D60
camera body is fine. I'd check it with some other fast lenses. It
would also be interesting to check the camera/lens combo at
infinity to see what the lens indication is ( how far off the mark
is the inf. mark on the barrel ). Possibly the CMOS sensor is off,
but Canon's check on the AF sensor distance reads as OK. Pete.
http://www.petestone.com
--Pete - you are pointing out that both the lens aned the body needRead my post for a possible cause:
http://www.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1019&message=3019725
to be sent in for adjustment.
I think that the interface between the camera and the lens is what
is the Canon standard/specification is, and both the body and the
lens need to follow it. Consider what would happen if you have a
set of lenses and 2 bodies - which pair would you adjust ? Buying
a new lens would possibly cause a new "readjustment" of the body,
which would then cause problems with the other lenses in the set.
The treatment of the body and lens as a pair seems an unworkable
solution.
Paul.
--You may think so. Canon does not. They tested the body using a VERYI think your test may have been a little flawed for two reasons.
similar technique, found it to be out of spec and adjusted it. I
have to assume it left both the Canon factory and CPS in perfect
adjustment. It appears to be falling out of adjustment during
shipping. That is THIER opinion at the moment.
By the way, I only did the test after I noticed that all of the
pictures I had taken appeared to be out of focus. The problem is
with the camera/lens, not the test.
David Jay
pete stone
pete stone
Regards,Yep.Crouched down low though.Do mean one end of the tape was at your feet, and it was extending
directly away from you? And you focused at the 1, 3, 6, 9-foot
marks on the tape?
David Jay
--Not subtle at all. I'm talking 1" to 5" out of focus. ie: Focused
on 36" and 33" is sharp, 36" is blurry. Every time. Surely this is
unuseable.
This test is very simple yet the results are obvious and
undeniable. I posted my results only as a "heads up" for other D60
owners. Use the information as you like. I do suggest testing your
cameras though, using your largest aperture lens shot wide open.
David Jay
--
http://www.davidjayphotography.com
--You may think so. Canon does not. They tested the body using a VERY
similar technique, found it to be out of spec and adjusted it. I
have to assume it left both the Canon factory and CPS in perfect
adjustment. It appears to be falling out of adjustment during
shipping. That is THIER opinion at the moment.
By the way, I only did the test after I noticed that all of the
pictures I had taken appeared to be out of focus. The problem is
with the camera/lens, not the test.
Did they say WHY it's possible to fall out of adjustment during
shipping?
This is very disconcerting to me. Just how careful do you have to
be with these bodies not to upset the AF-adjustments?
If your concerned about shipping have a read of this, the thought or 25 foot falls for my D60 makes me cringe!Did they say WHY it's possible to fall out of adjustment during
shipping?
This is very disconcerting to me. Just how careful do you have to
be with these bodies not to upset the AF-adjustments?
--I have visions of missing loctite and then jiggling in the back of
a UPS truck for 20 hours, let alone multiple 2 foot drops on
converyors - that's why I'm having Canoga send my replacement via
next-day air. But Greg said they ship these ground all the time and
never have a problem (but then again, maybe my experience
contradicts that).
Your shot has f3.5
but David's shot had f1.4
Regards
Thanh
David,
Two cameras with exactly the same problem? One supposidly
calibrated by Canon and the same problem still? This is really
strange. What rotten luck. My D60 seems to focus perfectly.
I think your test may have been a little flawed for two reasons.
Handholding certainly leads to a small (but real) change in
distance between the focus point and the sensor plane between the
time of focus lock (half shutter press) and the time of image
capture, not to mention any camera movement due to the mirror flip.
Crouching also is a very difficult position to hold really steady.
Second, the angle between your camera and the tape can only lead to
enhanced possibilities for experimental error. It would certainly
be hard for you and/or the focus sensor to decide on exactly
where the focus point is supposed to be, because of the angle.
I would suggest trying the "carpet" test. Keep your focus object
exactly perpindicular to the ruler, carpet, or whatever you are
using to judge front/rear focus. Also, keep your camera/sensor
plane exactly in normal incidence with the focus object.
I tried a test this a.m., shown here. Best I can tell, my D60 is
spot on in focus. Zoom in and check out the carpet just to the
right of the bottom of the cereal box. I focused on the small
print just above "Ingredients". Note that this is a jpg image, so
the small text is a little distorted, but you can clearly see from
the carpet where the focus plane is - it seems to be exactly where
it should be... the front plane of the box.
http://www.pbase.com/image/3077764
This is not consistent with modern feedback control systems, and certainly not the way the D60 focus system works. Any error generated because the motor "moves" to the wrong position would show up on the camera AF sensor and new instructions would be issued to the lens... this process continues until the lens is in a focus state that the camera AF decides is "best focus".If the lens has an internal AF error, the camera AF can be correct,
but the ultrasonic motor "moves" to the wrong position.
Check out in particular the description of the photocoupler as
described by Chuck Westfall.
Best wishes, Pete.
Thus if the lens is a little out of whack, an active feedback
control system will null out any mismatch error with the lens... it
will keep pulsing the lens until focus is achieved (minimizing the
error).
If the system was open-loop, as you describe, accurate focus across
many lenses would be hopeless... there is no way to control
manufacturing tolerances to those levels.
It is highly unlikely that this is a lens-camera combination
problem. The only way one can imagine the lens causing this
problem is if it has an electronics problem causing the stepper
motor to oscillate between front and rear focus... thus a lens
failure, not a combination failure.
The way the Canon EOS System functions, at least with the
Ultrasonic lenses, is that the camera body tells the lens AF motor
how may "pulses" and in which direction to move the lens assembly.
If the lens has an internal AF error, the camera AF can be correct,
but the ultrasonic motor "moves" to the wrong position. Many Pro's
have had to send in their fast EF teles for adjustment after heavy
use ( and abuse! ) to correct AF error in the lens itself.
What I'm saying is that maybe the 50 1.4 lens is off, and the D60
camera body is fine. I'd check it with some other fast lenses. It
would also be interesting to check the camera/lens combo at
infinity to see what the lens indication is ( how far off the mark
is the inf. mark on the barrel ). Possibly the CMOS sensor is off,
but Canon's check on the AF sensor distance reads as OK. Pete.
http://www.petestone.com
--In the last week I've received two D60's from two retailers. I'm a
professional fashion photographer and shoot a lot of close-up
"beauty" with VERY shallow depth of field. Accurate focus is
critical.....obviously.
So I tested as follows: 50mm 1.4, wide open. Laid a tape measure
out on the floor, crouched down in front of it and shot at 0ft,
1ft, 3ft, 6ft, 9ft. First focusing manually and then repeating with
autofocus. Results: EVERY PICTURE OUT OF FOCUS. Manual in front,
auto behind. BOTH CAMERAS.
Overrnighted one body to CPS. They adjusted it and overnighted it
back to me today. Tested it again. Result. Exactly the same. Every
picture out of focus. Called CPS, spoke with tech, he assured me he
had adjusted it "spot on" 12 hours before. Its on its way back to
CPS for round 2.
Houston, we've got a problem.
David Jay
--
Yup, f3.5. That's as wide open as the ole 28-135 IS will go. Now
what does this have to do with the testing procedure (other than
the obvious difference in DOF, which has nothing to do with the
discussion here)?
Cirkitdude,
Your shot has f3.5
but David's shot had f1.4
Regards
Thanh
Pete,
I agree that there might be someting wrong in the lense that cause
the focus failed, as the closed AF system gives up after several
attempts.
Here I have something I just wonder:
20 hours life for the USM motor? (you said in your post)
= 72000 secs
Every picture might take about 3 times for focus lock and composing.
Each time of focusing probably takes about a sec (if not hunting)
so with 72000 secs you can take probably 72000 / 3 = 24000 pictures
If you take 200 pics a day, that's gonna be 120 days less than a year?
Thanh
Here's a link you might like to see:
http://www.photoscene.com/sw/tour/inside.htm
Check out in particular the description of the photocoupler as
described by Chuck Westfall.
Best wishes, Pete.