Eagle Eye said:curtisnull said:What I am saying is that I will send a lens to Canon and just ask for "clean and check". Then Canon identifies a problem. I am not telling Canon that I am having a problem with the lens. They are finding it, or so they say. Some lenses just come back saying cleaned, everything is within spec.
I see. Defective? No. Just outside Canon's quality control tolerances? Maybe. I'm sure Canon's equipment can detect alignment issues that none of us could detect, and those alignment issues happen through everyday use of lenses.
So you send an item off to the repair shop for "Clean and check"...
Step one, slap it onto a body and take a couple of shots to see if it actually works..... For this step, they don't care how well it focuses, just that the elements move and that there are no gross failures in the mechanicals or the electronics....
Step two... clean it. This means removing casings and elements....
Step 3.... put it back together, lubricating and aligning as you go....
Step 4... calibrate...
It does not matter if the lens was +50 AFMA units off or 0 AFMA units off when it arrived at the shop... after the disassembly and cleaning, they have to recalibrate the lens before they are done... at this point they adjust it to within specs. The fact that it was adjusted only means that they did the job right. I, for one, would be very mad at them if the took my lens apart and then put it back together without calibrating it.....
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