weezintrumpete Offline Upload & Sell: On
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Cableaddict wrote:
weezintrumpete wrote:
cogitech wrote:
weezintrumpete wrote:
... like others have said, get a chipped adapter!
...or a proper focusing screen, or learn how to focus by scale, or...
I agree, but I prefer to have the focus confirmation as a "backup" of sorts. Sometimes I need to focus fairly quickly (as the OP might, since he has a "sports" camera of sorts...the 1DII) and if I just rely on my eyes, it takes too long sometimes.
A focus-confirm chip would be worse than nothing for sports. They only get you "close." Also, like Steve wrote, there is also a small amount of time needed for you to see the LED and then fire. You are MUCH better off just focusing & firing.
What I find much more difficult, for both sports and wildlife, is not having auto-exposure.
Anyway, I think focus-confirm is useless for anything except low-light shooting.
In my experience, which comes from shooting models in tight time situations as well as casual shooting, I find the focus confirm to be VERY helpful. When I review my shots afterward, I'd say that in ~90% of them, the focus is exactly where I wanted it. Of course, all focus confirm chips behave differently, and I may have just had good luck with mine. I started out using non-confirm adapters and my results (at least in focus accuracy) improved greatly once I got the focus confirm ones.
I don't see the harm in spending the little extra dough, trying it out for yourself and deciding what you think to be the best. All I'm saying is that in my experience, the focus confirm adapters have greatly helped me.
And as I said in my last post, YMMV 
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