Good matte paper and an inkjet printer. Laser prints are somewhat reflective, and my fight with getting decisive AFMA prediction results is most likely because of this (I don't have access to an inkjet).victorwol said:It's not that complicated. It basically does it all for you. Unless its a 5DMKIII or a 1D X in which case you have to change the values of the adjustment manually since those cameras apparently don't allow that to be done via the USB remote. You will have to print a chart on a good piece of matte paper and put it against a flat surface and the camera on a tripod and start the tests. The Pro version is the best.
victorwol said:Reikan FocCal too... much better than anything else I've tried.
mikenott said:Print off test result pdf files to save rerunning if you update Canon firmware or reset camera.
neuroanatomist said:mikenott said:Print off test result pdf files to save rerunning if you update Canon firmware or reset camera.
Firmware updates don't clear out the AFMA data (at least, they never have for me - maybe a firmware update gone bad where you power off the camera in the middle?). Even if you Reset All Settings, that doesn't clear out the AFMA values (it just sets the function to No Adjustment, the values are retained). Only deleting all settings from within the AFMA menu itself can clear them out.
Still, I keep an Excel table with all my AFMA values, just in case.
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Same here! Just have to do one more test for my 70-200 + 1.4 extender! Then it'll be complete.
pwp said:victorwol said:Reikan FocCal too... much better than anything else I've tried.
Which version did you choose and why?
Thanks,
-PW