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micro adjustment results for canon 7D with 70-200 2.8 IS USM II

Falketimages
Contributor

I would appreciate any help. Not an expert on the subject. Pictures come out very soft, have a hard time adjusting camera & lens. I know that each lens and camera in sync would give different results, but any numbers for MA specially at 200 mm. Thank you to memebers of the forum for the help.

32 REPLIES 32


@kvbarkley wrote:

LensAlign by Michael Tapes is a good hardware solution that takes a lot of guesswork out of it.


DotTune is free, and it takes ALL of the guesswork out of it.  Try it some time, if your camera has AFMA.

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"The right mouse button is your friend."

How do you tell with DotTune that your camera is perpendicular with the target?

 

ETA:

Actually, the lens align will work really well with the dot tune method. It provides a nice focus target and keeps the camera perpendicular to the target.

You can to a certain degree if you want to but it is not perfect. Using the cameras eletronic level and using a level on the target which get is part way. I have chatted with the creator of Dot Tune at other sites. The latest is he found using his method works best for him at infinity. He uses street signs and roof tops.

 

I set up target at a pretty far distance and tried to keep everything as pepandicualr as I could. Dot Tune gave me the saem resutls as FoCal but I had trouble repeating it. Even a bit of wind will through it off. Atmospheric coditions like heat off a rooftop depending on what part of the day you do it. Don' t get me wrong. Dot Tune is very good and polpular. I chose FoCal and am very happy with it. Consistent and accurate. 

"I set up target at a pretty far distance and tried to keep everything as pepandicualr as I could. Dot Tune gave me the saem resutls as FoCal but I had trouble repeating it." 

 

Repeating which result?  Getting the same number for each approach?  Getting close to the same number from both approaches?

 

I do the focus calibration at least three times indoors, and on different days.  I use the average of all of the measurements as my correct setting.  I need just under two feet of distance for every 10mm of focal length.  I need about 20 feet for 100mm.

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

Getting the same number on different days with Dot Tune. I always get the same results using FoCal.   

"I set up target at a pretty far distance and tried to keep everything as pepandicualr as I could. Dot Tune gave me the saem resutls as FoCal but I had trouble repeating it."

 

I conduct the tests indoor whenever possible, which takes temperature and humidity out of the equation, and get nearly the same result each time, +/- 1, which is also the margin of error for the method.  You cannot round off setting values at the and low end, and sometimes the final number winds up not being a whole number, so you're forced to round it off.

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

"How do you tell with DotTune that your camera is perpendicular with the target?

 

How?  By dead reckoning.  Smiley Happy  How do you tell that your target is perpendicular with the camera? 

 

Not unless you are focusing at macro distances, I don't see what critical difference it makes what the relative angles are.  The camera is only focusing on a single spot, or small area, anyway.  What significant difference does it make if that spot is perpendicular, or not?

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"The right mouse button is your friend."

ebiggs1
Legend
Legend

My ef 70-200mm f2.8L II required nothing. It is perfect. Smiley Happy

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

You are lucky. I got a lemon. 

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