Thanks for the link. Anyone care to translate the gist of the article/video into English?
I have a 70D and EF-S 17-55 F2.8 IS, and I've noticed that focus is hit or miss via the viewfinder -- mostly miss. I've invested in FoCal and run through the calibration process, and each time it produces a different AFMA value for a given focal length and distance (e.g. running the calibration process several times in a row without changing any of the setup). The suggested AFMA values are usually anywhere from -1 to +2 or +3.
Calibration Info
1. Tripod on concrete basement floor at night.
2. Constant lights providing ~12ev.
3. Calibrations at distances of both 25x and 50x focal length
4. Calibrations for both 17MM and 55MM focal length
On one occasion, FoCal did not complete the calibration saying that the results were not consistent enough to generate an AFMA value, although the two or three calibrations I did after that (with identical setup) worked with "Good" results.
Unfortunately, I don't have another lens to test with right now, so I'm left wondering if it's the body or the lens. Live view is usually correctly focused, which is what pointed me to AFMA to begin with, but even after calibration, focusing through the viewfinder is unreliable enough that I'm mostly using Live View now so I don't miss the shots.
Is this likely a body or lens issue (or user error

)? It's just frustrating when I focus on an eye (at shutter speeds well beyond 1/FL) and get a nice sharp eyebrow but blurry eye or even nothing sharp at all. Maybe I should test individual focus points?
Anyway, this is something I'm trying to get to the bottom of -- when I have the time. Any tips or info are welcome.
Cheers...
PS -- One other thought: while it's probably far less likely, is it possible that there's a slight misalignment of either the AF sensor or the LCD overlay in the viewfinder such that the focus point I see isn't really representing the location that the AF sensor is "seeing"? For example, what if the AF sensor really is seeing the eyebrow when the focus point in the viewfinder is over the iris? Just thinking out loud here...I should probably set aside an afternoon, channel my inner Neuroanatomist and do this in as structured and scientific a manner as possible...and maybe borrow another lens while I'm at it.