07-10-2015 11:07 AM - edited 07-10-2015 11:30 AM
This would apply to anhy camera that has case numbers or the 3 parameter settings. I have owned all the crop bodies from the 20D to 7D2. Also all 3 5D and currently have the 5D3.
I am not stuggling in any way. I went out birding (in flght) a few weeks weeks ago and tried all 6 case numbers and all AF modes, single, expanded and zone. Since they were steady and non erractic I had very good succes and found zone to work quite well on this body.
I have been curious about Canon's explanation about AF switching when it comes to expansion AF mode.
From the 7D2 manual
The key phrase the camera switches it's focus to neighbouring AF points. My understanding is the surrounding AF points around the centre point in expanded are assist AF points. In AI Servo I never see anything switch. Ever. All I see is the centre point illuminated. Perhaps they just assist faster. If so I wish Canon would have worded it that way.
Personally I decided it does not make much sense so if I'm in Cases 5 or 6 I use zone where the AF points are actually switching. If you are tracking an erratic subject it just makes sense the more AF points involved the better. Especially in 65 AF for those really small fast birds that change directions quickly. Very difficult to track in expansion - even in 8 point.
Of course this is just my opinion. This is the only part of that entire manual that I have always questioned. Even the Canon PDF AF guide. I keep asking in case someone has found the answer on other forums but no answer yet.
07-15-2015 09:38 PM - edited 07-15-2015 09:40 PM
Have you seen more than one expansion AF point light up in one shot drive mode?
I think that the central point is always light up and one eventual surrounding point may eventually light up, which would be the final chosen AF point.
I also believe that in all AF area modes except zones (point, point expansion 4, point expansion 8), the camera will finally focus on one point only, it is not an average or weighing of more than one AF point.
Please let us know if you find something that states otherwise.
Ricci.
07-15-2015 11:15 PM
07-16-2015 12:26 PM
07-16-2015 06:48 PM
07-17-2015 09:31 AM
07-17-2015 09:46 AM
07-13-2015 10:55 AM
According to the 7D II docs... "tracking" only works in full 65-point AF selection mode and the Zone AF selection mode (and since the 7D II actually has two variations on zone mode, I'm guessing it works on both. My 5D III only has one zone mode so I can't test that.)
If you are in spot, single point, expanded, or surround modes, the tracking is not supposed to work.
Also, the iTR on the 7D II is better than the version in the 5D III. In the 1D X and on the 7D II you can link the iTR to metering and color and it can also do face detection. There's a sensitivity setting for this if you enable the linking. The 5D III doesn't have the ability to link the iTR to metering in the same way that the 7D II can do it.
Exanded and Surround modes are variations on single-point AF (the camera still wants to use the center point) except that it gets to borrow adjacent points to help it lock focus. Particularly useful if the subject has poor contrast because you enlarge the area in which it might find enough contrast to help it lock focus. Spot AF is the opposite... it reduces the size of the single point AF but requires that the subject used to lock focus have particularly good contrast -- not suitable for poor contrast targets.
But none of these modes (Spot, Expanded, or Surround modes) claim to do tracking according to Canon documentation.
I have only used full auto-select mode when doing tracking (even though the docs state it should also work in zone AF mode -- I just haven't used it that way. -- mostly because if it does do tracking, it's only within the zone (it wont follow a subject if they leave the zone.)
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