The 24-105 and others have completely different motors, and the focusing groups are WAY heavier in the RF85 for instance, a good reason they use the same USM as the 400 f2.8. Heavy glass move slow if it’s accurate so it’s no surprise. I just haven’t used any fast AF glass with the R, so can’t tell where the issue is... thanks for chiming inThat surprises me.
My R focusses lightning fast with the RF24-105 and all my other EF lenses and other brands too.
Either there is something up with your settings or something is wrong with the body.
I guess because the focusing group of the 400 is much smaller and lighter?What I don't understand is that, according to reviews, the 400 f.2,8 seems to be a fast focusing lens.
So, why should the RF 50 and 85 be slow, since the are said to be fitted with the same AF motors?
The 24-105 is indeed extremely fast!
PS: according to TDP, the RF 85's AF is very fast...
And less accurate. It is a lot easier to get accuracy at f2.8 at a longer distance than f1.2 at a closer distance.I guess because the focusing group of the 400 is much smaller and lighter?
I appreciate that, and normally I would totally agree with you. It all changed after going to Broncolor and the R plus RF, I’m actually very, very happy with the gear and how it performs.And less accurate. It is a lot easier to get accuracy at f2.8 at a longer distance than f1.2 at a closer distance.
But I fear we have entered the 'Viggo Spiral'©, you love your new toys and proclaim them better than anything previous, you then find faults, you then find numerous faults and send stuff back for service and swap stuff out and generally hyper analyze. You then get down on a piece of equipment by which time Canon EF toR or Profoto to Broncolor give you another option and you chase that path. meanwhile most people who view even your rejects of shooting your kids are blown away at how good the actual images are. Your content vastly outstrips the perceived flaws or limitations of the highest end gear you use and I say all that with the very greatest of respect.
I use release priority if that’s what you mean, getting 5 instead of 3 fps. More chance of oof images, but frankly it doesn’t miss for anything but the fastest action.Do you have the camera set to AF tracking? I don't have the two lenses you mention. Last night I shot an event, mainly EF 85/1.8 and EF200/2.8, mostly using eye tracking. Brlliant!. Focus on eye, recompose, expose. Really quick and accuate for relatively static subjects. Previous time out shooting running event. Tracking seems to slow AF aquisition, and so got lot of OOF images. Turn tracking off, but keep servo AF - much better.