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You are here: Home / GFX 50S / AF accuracy of Fuji 23/4 on GFX

AF accuracy of Fuji 23/4 on GFX

July 1, 2017 JimK 2 Comments

This is the 64th in a series of posts on the Fujifilm GFX-50S. The series starts here. 

Yesterday I reported on longitudinal chromatic aberration (LoCA) and focus shift with the Fuji 23 mm f/4 lens on the GFX 50S. I found the focus shift to be minimal, and the LoCA about average for a high-quality lens. Now I’m going to do a test of autofocus accuracy, using the same target as yesterday, but from a much greater distance, 2 meters. This is as far away as I cant get from this particular target and still have enough pixels to so the sharpness analysis accurately. Of course, I could print a bigger target and get further away, but I think 2 meters is far enough to get the measure of the lens in its comfort zone.

I used the bottom of the central slanted square, and the AF area covered that and the zone plate to the left.  The details:

  • ISO 100
  • AF-S
  • Release priority: focus
  • Manual exposure
  • Wescott LED panels set to 5500 K.
  • EFCS
  • Cognisys computer-driven focusing rail
  • 51 exposures 1.6 mm  apart
  • Target distance at the center of the rial, 2 m.
  • RAF converted to DNG in Adobe DNG Converter
  • DNG exported as TIFF mosaiced file in dcraw (document mode)
  • TIFFs cropped and raw channels selected in Matlab program
  • MTF50 of cropped TIFFs measured with MTF Mapper
  • Data assembled in Matlab
  • Data plotted in Excel

The results, for each raw channel:

 

 

 

The vertical axis is MTF50, measured in cycles per picture height (cy/ph). I plotted the average of the 32 images, the average plus the standard deviation (aka sigma), and the average minus sigma.

These results are far more consistent than I saw with the Fuji 63 mm f/2.8 lens. They are more consistent than I saw with the Fuji 120 mm f/4 macro lens. 

How do these results compare to manual focusing? I made a series of images with the lens set at a constant focus distance and the camera on the rail. 

  • At f/4, the green channel peak was 2000 cy/ph, as compared to and average of 1950 cy/ph using AF. I call that a wash.
  • At f/5.6, the best MF green MTF50 was 2500 cy/ph. Autofocus fell well short of that, with an average of 2100 cy/ph. The best out of 50 shots was 2250 cy/ph. That is very good performance, but you can do better using manual focusing. 
  • At f/8, the best manual focus image was 2200 cy/ph. The AF average result is only 100 cy/ph less than that, an inconsequential difference.
  • At f/11, you can get to 1800 cy/ph focusing manually, and AF gives you an average of only 50 cy/ph less than that. 

Some caveats:

  • This is an easy target for contrast-detection autofocus (CDAF) cameras like the GFX.
  • It would take you many tries to get the manual focusing nailed the way you can with a computer controlled rail.
  • The camera might do better — or worse — at other distances.
  • As I said in yesterday’s post, don’t compare the absolute sharpness reported here with that in the 63 and 120 macro tests, where I used a different target that produces higher numbers.

This is top-notch performance at all apertures save f/5.6. It’s not bad at f/5.6, but it’s probably worthwhile to use manual focusing at that aperture if conditions permit. It is a little disappointing that all three lenses that I’ve tested, the 23, 63, and 120, all show their worst AF performance at their best f-stops.

 

GFX 50S, The Last Word

← Focus shift, LoCA, focus stability of Fuji 23/4 on GFX Focus shift & LoCA of Fuji 110/2 on GFX →

Trackbacks

  1. Fuji 110/2 AF performance on GFX 50S says:
    July 3, 2017 at 2:30 pm

    […] this post, I reported on Fuji GFX 50S systematic autofocus errors at certain f-stops (mostly one, […]

    Reply
  2. Fuji 23/4 AF performance on GFX — high contrast inkjet target says:
    October 18, 2018 at 7:31 am

    […] these tests, I found that the AF consistency and accuracy with a low-contrast target was good, but not great. I […]

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