trencheel303
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No autofocus system is going to make a very good job of focusing on a blank wall it needs some detail to work correctly. Pick something with some decent contrast and see how it works. AF systems are not miracle workers, you have to use a bit of user common sense as well. You need to master the camera not let it master you......but if I try manually focussing on a wall or otherwise rather flat object, and take the shot, I can find it's slightly OOF even although the camera said it was in focus.
In my experience live view is more precise and I use it for close ups of things and also landscapes. However, it is excruciatingly slow and of no value for shooting anything with the slightest hint of movement.
I've not had any obvious complaints with my 450D along these lines. All cameras will struggle to focus on something if there is insufficient contrasting edges at the focal point. The 450D also has only the one central cross type sensor [picking up vertical and horizontal detail to aid focusing] whereas more advanced bodies have multiple cross type sensors to help in this area.
Focusing in live view works differently I seem to remember, which is why it takes so long. As you say, I suspect there's nothing wrong, just a limitation of the 450D's AF ability.
Hmm, Peter, I'm not quite seeing your logic with your answrs and I'm not entirely sure you were understanding my OP...let me clarify
I probably didn't make this clear in my OP but I have narrowed down my lack of ability to get tack sharp images to only when I am shooting scenes like the first photo I took. The focus system quite often gets it wrong (manually or auto focusm - regardless, it will tell me I am in focus when I am not quite) regardless of the lens, but if I fire off shots while gradually moving through the focus range I *will* get at least one which is tack sharp. If I stop down to say, f/8, it gives me more DOF so the shot is more likely to be in focus. It's almost as if the body is back/front focussing ONLY when shooting bland, flat objects, which as suggested may well just be a design limitation.
I honestly don't think clamping on a thousand pound lens is going to make that much of a difference - an incorrect focus is an incorrect focus, regardless. I've probably confused the hell out of you, and at this point I am pretty much just going on assumptions - so I will post sample images tonight to show you what I mean!
It should be noted that the effect is more noticeable at lower F/ numbers, and seems to be regardless of the light levels.
What do you guys make of it?
last time I checked this wasn't poor light:
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There was a post on here a short while back specifically on Canon AF, would well be worth a looksee...