There is nothing to focus on between the dogs eyes though.
We have to remember that focus needs an area of contrast to work. In those examples there's very little contrast in the dogs face - that makes it a tricky subject to focus on despite what we might believe the camera ought to be able to do. The camera will look for an area of contrast within the focus point - as it has here; and focussed on the bush.
I live by knypersley reservoir in stoke on trent and shall be down there walking the dogs over the week end if any local expert fancies meeting up to educate me it would be much appreciatedI'll try and set a static scene where I have the issue repeatedly and then try some MF shots and compare
why would I want to pick a constant aperture
it was a quick set of simple spur of the moment shots in an attempt to demonstrate the issue I am having
I picked just a few examples from the shots I took which best showed the focusing issues I am experiencing which seems purely random to my untrained abilities
Are you recommending I should select a different aperture if so what
sometimes the camera gets it right often it gets the focusing wrong this is what I am trying to get to the bottom of
It has already been suggested that the camera will struggle at such wide apertures on the subject matter at this range so I am going to try some shots at smaller apertures when the monsoon stops
I took 3 shots last night in low light of the cameras I have focusing on the canon logo
whilst the pics were quite good the 600d had perfectly focussed on the 7d's canon logo as did the galaxy s3, the 7d pic was out of focus on the 600d's canon log and the logo was the spot focus centre point on all 3 test shots the 7 d had clearly focused perfectly on another part of the image
I used my 17-55 f2.8
std camera flash was used and the 600d and 7d were both set to p and the cameras had selected identical aperture iso and shutter speed
Because any kind of testing should be done under controlled conditions
I'd turn off the spot focus, it's intended for critical focus subjects in controlled conditions. Single point AF is all that's required as per my post.many thanks for that Phil
I am just trying to get to grips with the 7d's advanced focusing system
all the pics were taken with one shot spot centre af focus and as far as I could tell the dogs were perfectly static at the point of shooting
Absolutely. Testing AF requires good light, a good target and a good tripod. If you can't get good results under those conditions then there's probably something wrong with the equipment. If you do get good results from those conditions then AF problems under different circumstances are almost certainly down to user error.
Because any kind of testing should be done under controlled conditions, because as soon as you allow variables into experiments you have lost control.
Do you understand the difference between spot focussing and single point focussing on the 7d? Because throughout this thread some wildly inaccurate terms have been used which fills me with a complete lack of confidence (not just by you). I've also seen recommendations for the use of AI Focus mode - which is hideously unreliable - think of it as a green box focus mode.
What I'm trying to say is that the 7d has a very elaborate AF system, which is fantastically customisable, but when it was launched the Internet lit up with people who couldn't make it work. 99% of the time, the problem was user error. If it works sometimes but not others, you have to work out what you're doing differently - and remember - you're telling the camera what to do, whether you fully understand those instructions or not.
I'd recommend starting with a simple set up. One shot AF static subject - centre point AF, if that works, there's nothing wrong with the AF.
2ndly try AI servo AF, I recommend selecting an off centre AF point and with maybe some focus point expansion (depending on tracking and speed of subject). And all the time remember you've got to give it something to focus on.
I always use back button focus, because to me it's more like using a MF camera where I'd control the focus completely independently of the shutter firing. It's too easy when using the shutter button to focus to inadvertently tell it to refocus when I don't want it to.
If you can see all the variables there are just around the AF system, can you see why I'd want to remove any other variables from the equation before testing?![]()
Tony, I shot this yesterday @300mm at just under 7 Metres. Far from picture perfect quality but it shows what you should be able to achieve focus wise with the 7D
I'll give it a whirl in av mode if I am still having these random issues it might be best I send it to canon with the lenses and see what it's like when I get it back
I'm sick of reading lol
It will help. No one here or at canon can help until you actually show that this is not user error. Your testing so far has been all over the place, different settings and targets. Your comparisons with the 600d have been using different lenses!
Sit down. Reset the 7D, don't put it in spot focus. Use one lens, with the camera mounted on a tripod and aim at a fixed target. This will exclude or prove camera error. It has to be done like this or nothing can be proved or disproved!
(And yes, I do have a science background!)![]()
just out testing my dodgy sigma 30mm f1.4 from ebay
done as suggested and have found ai focus on is improving things so user error or just that I am old and wobbly lol
just out testing my dodgy sigma 30mm f1.4 from ebay
done as suggested and have found ai focus on is improving things so user error or just that I am old and wobbly lol
. I've also seen recommendations for the use of AI Focus mode - which is hideously unreliable - think of it as a green box focus mode.

lolReally pleased you took note of the advice you were offered!![]()
it's taken me 8 months to get to grips with my 7D, what i found was it was totally unforgiving compared to my 40D, after lots of practice i'm finally getting shots i'm happy with
_MG_3971 by jalizcazan, on Flickr

if all my shots were as well focused as that I'd be jumping for Joy who ever she is![]()
Just to add another spanner in the works TonyHave you tried different tests and changed the distance scale on the lens. I remember with my old 20-200F4L if it was set on whichever distance there would be times depending on distance of subject what I would describe as no mans land, where the lens would lock on and fire, although it looked ok in the viewfinder it would come out soft. Step forward or backward a foot or three and there was no problem whatsoever.
