Recently Scott Bourne reviewed the LensAlign Pro made by these people:
LensAlign® Focus Calibration System
This is a device for determining with considerable accuracy whether there is a front-focus or back-focus bias in the autofocus of a camera. I understand how it works, but not why you need to do this for each lens you use.
I thought the autofocus system of a modern DSLR was essentially a feedback system, in which the autofocus sensor provides the information on how good the focus is, and the camera then interprets that and activates the focusing motor to move the lens in or out until maximum sharpness is achieved in the focusing sensor. So there's nothing in the lens itself that has any effect on this, except that the lens must move appropriately in response to the camera's commands. But there's no sensor in the lens - all of the "smarts" in the autofocus system are in the body.
I can see that if the main image sensor and the focus sensor are not exactly the same focal distance from the lens, then autofocus might have a front or back bias. It would be the same problem as in manual focus if the main image sensor and the ground glass at the end of the penta-whatever reflections are not quite at the same focus point. But I don't understand why one autofocus adjustment made for the body wouldn't serve for all lenses.
But it's clear I must be wrong about this, because the LensAlign site clearly states the adjustment must be made for each lens, and in fact the high-end cameras that permit fine-tuning of autofocus also remember a setting for each lens.
And in the same review, Bourne mentions a lens that had to be sent back because it had a front-focus bias, which doesn't make any sense to me. All this means that I don't understand autofocus - maybe it's not a feedback system at all.
So could someone who really understands this please explain (in excrutiating techincal detail :-) ) how autofocus really works, or at least why the fine-tuning would be different for each lens? This is going to bother me until I understand it.
Thanks very much.
TLT
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