jaredvs said:You are in luck sir!!! I am in need of a 7d MkII that someone is tired of!!! Feel free to contact me for my shipping address! I will pay for shipping, and that is about it 8) !
Mancubus said:I've had EXACTLY the same problem with my 7D2. ... All my shots still had exactly the same kind of softness you showed on the polar bear.
AlanF said:There are parallel threads about soft 7DIIs going on, so it must be real. I have an early model with serial number beginning 033. By chance I have been comparing telephoto lenses on it this morning with them on the 5DS R using charts, the results of which bear out my experience of using the 7DII in the real world for 18 months.
My 7DII hardly differs from the 5DS R with the 100-400mm II and also the Sigma 150-600mm C at 400 mm and 600mm, with really sharp results of both lenses on both bodies. But, my 300mm f/2.8 II + 2xTC III on the 7DII is soft, whereas it is sharp on the 5D R.
So, in my case, it seems that the 7DII doesn't work well with some lenses.
picturefan said:AlanF said:There are parallel threads about soft 7DIIs going on, so it must be real. I have an early model with serial number beginning 033. By chance I have been comparing telephoto lenses on it this morning with them on the 5DS R using charts, the results of which bear out my experience of using the 7DII in the real world for 18 months.
My 7DII hardly differs from the 5DS R with the 100-400mm II and also the Sigma 150-600mm C at 400 mm and 600mm, with really sharp results of both lenses on both bodies. But, my 300mm f/2.8 II + 2xTC III on the 7DII is soft, whereas it is sharp on the 5D R.
So, in my case, it seems that the 7DII doesn't work well with some lenses.
Very interesting, so we have two people starting a thread with same problems. As it looks, many agree and find out that they also suffer from same softness. When I get the OP here right, it is not only a af-problem, it is having soft pics most of the time with telephot-lens, like the polar bear example.
Is it a "batch-problem"? My serial-nr. starts with 06, but, when I bought, it was Firmware 1.02 (in Nov. 2015).
AdamBotond said:That issue with AF inconsistency seems to be very real. I had been considering getting a 7DII soon, so I rented one for the last weekend and gave it a tryout in wildlife enviroment I'm familiar with, so I could have a fair comparison with my 6D that I have been using for years. Guess what. Despite number of AF points in 6d, lacking of more than one cross type af point, focus-and-recompose technique, I found 6D far more reliable and consistent. It did not become obvious until pixel peeping, and most can say there is no visible difference between the two for most uses. But it is what it is. Decide yourself.
Long story short, there is a local lake where I usually go to photograph pond turtles every month. Animals taken shots of were practically stationary, high shutter speed used with the same 400 5.6 L lens. As you can see, on the 6D- despite of focus and recompose- head is tack sharp, even at 100%. On the 7D II, thanks to wide spread coverage, af was dead on the head, however it is out of focus, seems blurry, which first made think it was a slight motion blur. But it wasn't. I shot a sequence of 8 shots (back-focus button on, iTR enabled) and most of them looked even worse. Reflection of the head looks in focus, instead.
Rutting season is on the horizon, and my plan was to get a better wildlife performer camera, but based on these experiences I will think twice about buying a 7D II.
AdamBotond said:That issue with AF inconsistency seems to be very real. I had been considering getting a 7DII soon, so I rented one for the last weekend and gave it a tryout in wildlife enviroment I'm familiar with, so I could have a fair comparison with my 6D that I have been using for years. Guess what. Despite number of AF points in 6d, lacking of more than one cross type af point, focus-and-recompose technique, I found 6D far more reliable and consistent. It did not become obvious until pixel peeping, and most can say there is no visible difference between the two for most uses. But it is what it is. Decide yourself.
Long story short, there is a local lake where I usually go to photograph pond turtles every month. Animals taken shots of were practically stationary, high shutter speed used with the same 400 5.6 L lens. As you can see, on the 6D- despite of focus and recompose- head is tack sharp, even at 100%. On the 7D II, thanks to wide spread coverage, af was dead on the head, however it is out of focus, seems blurry, which first made think it was a slight motion blur. But it wasn't. I shot a sequence of 8 shots (back-focus button on, iTR enabled) and most of them looked even worse. Reflection of the head looks in focus, instead.
Rutting season is on the horizon, and my plan was to get a better wildlife performer camera, but based on these experiences I will think twice about buying a 7D II.
JMZawodny said:I've been using my 7D2 (serial number beginning with 022 bought new) for quite some time now. At first I thought it was soft or inconsistent, fears fed by fuel of discontent found here on this forum. However, after finding the AF scenario suited to my subjects and AFMA-ing all of lenses (especially the longer ones), I find the AF to be very accurate and reliable. I certainly refined my technique a bit along the way. Perhaps I'm lucky and ended up with a good body. I don't know. I do know that I had to work on the settings before I got consistently acceptable results. Most of the time I use it as a backup with a L zoom of some sort paired with long prime on a FF body. Some of the complaints posted to this thread are with using 3rd party lenses and some of the issue may be that tiny pixels will expose the weaknesses in optics and/or 3rd party implementations of the Canon AF protocols.
I do hope you find a solution and get to enjoy the 7D2.
Go Wild said:neuroanatomist said:One other thing to look for – when the pics are soft, are they sharp anywhere? I'm getting at, is the focus off or is the whole image soft?
Yes, i got the 2 situations, sometimes the sharp point appears in a zone out of the AF point selected, and other situations the image just get soft.
Let me put here 2 examples:
In both examples i got AF in back button and used the center point expanded. Both situations also AI SERVO was used
in example 1:
this photos were taken with 1/3200 F7.1 - Paralel movement to the camera, and slow movement of the animal. Camera placed in sturdy tripod and without movement. Easy shot! The results are this:
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same photo with crop:
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same photo with bigger crop:
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Now lets see an example of the 5D markIII. Same settings, same situation, altough in this the bear was more quiet, but in the other it was moving really slow.
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with crop:
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with bigger crop:
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AdamBotond said:That issue with AF inconsistency seems to be very real. I had been considering getting a 7DII soon, so I rented one for the last weekend and gave it a tryout in wildlife enviroment I'm familiar with, so I could have a fair comparison with my 6D that I have been using for years. Guess what. Despite number of AF points in 6d, lacking of more than one cross type af point, focus-and-recompose technique, I found 6D far more reliable and consistent. It did not become obvious until pixel peeping, and most can say there is no visible difference between the two for most uses. But it is what it is. Decide yourself.
Long story short, there is a local lake where I usually go to photograph pond turtles every month. Animals taken shots of were practically stationary, high shutter speed used with the same 400 5.6 L lens. As you can see, on the 6D- despite of focus and recompose- head is tack sharp, even at 100%. On the 7D II, thanks to wide spread coverage, af was dead on the head, however it is out of focus, seems blurry, which first made think it was a slight motion blur. But it wasn't. I shot a sequence of 8 shots (back-focus button on, iTR enabled) and most of them looked even worse. Reflection of the head looks in focus, instead.
Rutting season is on the horizon, and my plan was to get a better wildlife performer camera, but based on these experiences I will think twice about buying a 7D II.
Travelintrevor said:You really should not compare the two scenarios. The 7D MK II shot only has the head sticking out of the water but the 6D test shot is a stationary turtle on a log. Shoot like subject and then compare.