Does having only one cross-type AF point affect the Canon 6D’s low-light focusing?
Asked 3/31/2013
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Canon says the EOS 6D can autofocus in very low light, but it only has 11 AF points and just one cross-type point. Does having only one cross-type point reduce its low-light autofocus ability? More generally, do more cross-type focus points make autofocus more accurate or produce sharper focus?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
13y ago
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As with many things, the marketers have tried to convince us that bigger, more, or higher priced is always "better". Most of the time in photography quality trumps quantity.
Regardless of how many focus points a camera has, the camera's system primarily uses one to actually focus the lens. It may be a single point manually selected by you or it may be one of several AF points that are active based on the selected settings. If you have multiple focus points selected and more than one light up in the viewfinder, it only means that the camera is telling you that all of those focus points are at roughly the same distance.
What is more important than how many focus points the camera has is how sensitive the focus points are, and how accurately the camera/lens is able to move the elements in the lens to match the instructions from the camera.
Sensitivity: One of the ways to make AF elements more sensitive is to make them larger. The wider the distance between the two micro-lenses that split the light coming into the focus array, the more sensitive the AF system can be. The longer each line in the focus array is, the more accurate it can be. Although there is quite a bit of overlap, and in some cases shared lines, in the focus array of cameras with up to 61 focus points like the Canon EOS 1D X, all those lines start to get a little crowded on the focus array sensor. The center focus point in the 6D is rated down to EV -3. That is more sensitive than the 5DIII or the 1D X. The 5DIII and the 1D X are rated at EV -2, the 5DII was rated at EV -0.5. Sensitivity is also based on the maximum aperture of the lens being used. The 6D, as with any other camera, will be able to focus better in low light with an f/2.8 or wider lens mounted than with an f/4 or f/5.6 lens.
Accuracy: Early Auto Focus (AF) systems were "open loop" systems. The camera measured in which direction and how much out of focus the lens was, sent an instruction to move the lens a specific amount, and that was it. The emphasis was on speed rather than extreme accuracy. The most recent lenses have sensors in them that report back to the most recent cameras exactly when the lens has reached the intended point of focus. Roger Cicala, the CEO of LensRentals.com and technical guru, explains how he discovered this in a blog entry. In order for this "closed loop" system to be active, both the camera and lens needs to be one of the newer models that support this. If either one doesn't, then focus performance will be based on the older piece of equipment's design limitations. As the old saying goes, a chain is only as strong as the weakest link.
Here is a real world usage quote from Brian at The-Digital-Picture.com in his review of the Canon EOS 6D:
I can focus the 6D's center point on a subject with reasonable contrast down until autoexposure gives me a setting of 160 at 10 seconds and f/2.8 (really dark) with the Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8 L II USM Lens mounted (note that the 6D's metering range spec is listed at EV 1-20). The Canon EOS 1D X's center point could not focus on the same subject with the same lens mounted. Note that the 6D focuses very slowly under these dismal lighting conditions - but locking slowly is far better than failing to lock.
Originally by user15871. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user15871
13y ago
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Not necessarily. The number of cross-type points and the camera’s low-light AF capability are related only indirectly.
A cross-type AF point can detect both horizontal and vertical detail, so it is more reliable when a subject has only one dominant line orientation. That helps in certain situations, but it does not by itself mean better low-light performance.
For low light, the more important factor is how sensitive the AF sensor is. A camera can have fewer AF points yet still focus very well in dim conditions if those points—especially the center point—are highly sensitive.
Also, more AF points do not inherently make focus more accurate or sharper. The camera typically uses one AF point to drive focus, even if multiple points indicate subjects at a similar distance. Sharp focus depends more on AF sensor sensitivity, the camera/lens focusing precision, and choosing the right AF point for the subject.
So: one cross-type point does not automatically limit low-light AF, and more cross-type points do not automatically mean sharper or more accurate focus.
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