cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Canon EF 70-200mm f2.8 IS III Focus Issues

ucoralic
Apprentice

Has anyone encountered back focusing on this lens at 200mm and 2.8?

 

I tested it twice and each time it seems to focus a few inches in front of the subject? 

 

The lens is brand new.

 

 

8 REPLIES 8

Waddizzle
Legend
Legend

@ucoralic wrote:

Has anyone encountered back focusing on this lens at 200mm and 2.8?

 

I tested it twice and each time it seems to focus a few inches in front of the subject

 

The lens is brand new.

 

 


That's called front focusing.  How are you testing it?  If you're shooting handheld, then your conclusions could be misleading.

--------------------------------------------------------
"The right mouse button is your friend."

Hi! Thank you for responding so fast!

Appologies, someone corrected me the other day and said that i was wrong when i called it front focusing. 

 

I used a tripod and aimed directly on the eye. The first time i did it was handheld and i just assumed it was user error, but i am getting the same result with the tripod.

 

I should note that i dont seem to have this problem at any other focal length just 200mm

I would ask what camera are you using, but you're probably much better off contacting Canon Support.  I have not heard of this complaint before with ANY of the Canon 70-200mm lenses.  Not to say your issue isn't real, of course.  Contact Canon.

--------------------------------------------------------
"The right mouse button is your friend."

I use the Canon 5D Mark III

 

I will get in touch with Canon. Thank you!

If it is consistently front focusing, it can be corrected with the micro focus offset in the camera.  See:  https://cdn.static-bl.com/images/manual/Canon-AF-Micro-Adjust-Guide.pdf

 

I have a lot of expensive fast L lenses and several of them have required a slight calibration using this procedure in the camera to meet what I would call perfect focus, it takes just a few minutes to complete.  This is much easier than with the older cameras where you had to send the camera and lenses into Canon for them to make this calibration adjustment.  For narrower aperture lenses, this usually isn't noticeable but when you use telephoto lenses in the f2.8 and faster range it is worth checking when you acquire a new lens or new body.

 

Rodger

EOS 1DX M3, 1DX M2, 1DX, 5DS R, M6 Mark II, 1D M2, EOS 650 (film), many lenses, XF400 video

"I have not heard of this complaint before with ANY of the Canon 70-200mm lenses."

 

I totally agree with this.  Although highly unlikely to be the problem with that lens it is not impossible. What you need to do is set up a way to measure it not just shoot at a flat plain.  A yard stick for instance. On a tripod focus at a midway point on the ruler and see if focus was exactly at the place you aimed the camera. The camera/lens must be steady. Use just the center focus point. Use the cross-type focus point. Use One shot, never Ai-servo mode.  Turn off all lens corrections in your camera.

 

"I used a tripod and aimed directly on the eye."

If you used multiply focus points when you took the photo of the "eye" and perhaps Ai-servo focus mode that is a better cause of your problem.

EB
EOS 1DX and 1D Mk IV and less lenses then before!


@ebiggs1 wrote:

"I have not heard of this complaint before with ANY of the Canon 70-200mm lenses."

 

I totally agree with this.  Although highly unlikely to be the problem with that lens it is not impossible. What you need to do is set up a way to measure it not just shoot at a flat plain.  A yard stick for instance. On a tripod focus at a midway point on the ruler and see if focus was exactly at the place you aimed the camera. The camera/lens must be steady. Use just the center focus point. Use the cross-type focus point. Use One shot, never Ai-servo mode.  Turn off all lens corrections in your camera.

 

"I used a tripod and aimed directly on the eye."

If you used multiply focus points when you took the photo of the "eye" and perhaps Ai-servo focus mode that is a better cause of your problem.


When I have tested focus, I use either a ruler or a yardstick at an angle, combined with a vertical target for focusing.  Which setup I use depends on the focal length I am testing.  The red boxes are red bricks with a yardstick target.

 

FC7F53D5-1EFC-48F9-A534-AA84E82DC1FF.jpeg

--------------------------------------------------------
"The right mouse button is your friend."

I wouldn't consider having to slightly calibrate the AF a complaint with any lens.  There is going to be some variance from lens to lens and camera body to body so sometimes the variance of the combined pair is going to be of sufficient direction and magnitude to create an issue WHEN the depth of field is extremely shallow. 

 

I pretty much follow the Canon adjustment guide I linked earlier except I do a series of shots at varying calibration offsets in one run so that I can quickly choose either the correct offset from this first run or know which two offset points to choose between to make a second run.  Typically when dialing in a lens and body I will shoot three each at 0, +3, +5, +8 -3, -5, -8 and then carefully check all of these with a computer and large monitor.  It is very important to use a single focus point for all of these tests and to use either a tripod or sufficient shutter speed to ensure that camera motion blur doesn't impact the results.  You MUST follow Canon's direction to take multiple shots at each offset and manually throw the focus off between to ensure valid results.

 

I don't use any special target, for example when I dialed in a new 800 f5.6 lens to my 1DX III earlier this year I was setting up a charcoal grill to cook steaks when Fed Ex delivered the lens and the handy Kingsford charcoal bag and the grass around it made a practical target. The first image below was with no calibration offset and indicated slight front focusing, a +3 offset provided the best focus accuracy for this body and lens.  The same lens on my 5DS R requires a +5.

 

Many years ago I used to calibrate Tektronix 7000 series oscilloscope mainframes which were the high end market leader because of their performance and versatile range of measurement applications through the very wide range of plug in modules.  I had the required calibration standards, Tektronix standard value calibration plug ins, and the calibration fixtures which allowed calibrating every scope mainframe and plug in module to manufacturer standards which meant that any scope mainframe and any module could be paired and would meet STATED specifications over its measurement capability range.  HOWEVER if a specific scope mainframe was calibrated with a specific set of plug-ins, an even higher standard of measurement accuracy could be achieved.  That is very much like the way the Canon lenses and bodies are set up, the better lenses and bodies will work pretty darn well without specific calibration and will be sufficient for most purposes but to achieve the very best of which they are capable then it makes sense to spend a little time perfectly matching the lens and body as a system.

 

Again, for most lenses and situations it won't matter but if you are shooting with a very shallow depth of field and even more so when you need to use the full DoF that the lens provides at a certain focal length, aperture, and distance then calibration needs to be dead on.

 

Rodger

 

AFMA 0.JPG

 

AFMA plus 3.JPG

EOS 1DX M3, 1DX M2, 1DX, 5DS R, M6 Mark II, 1D M2, EOS 650 (film), many lenses, XF400 video
Avatar
Announcements