Why is manual focus on my Nikon D7000 less sharp than autofocus?
Asked 3/3/2013
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When I focus manually on my Nikon D7000, my photos often are not as sharp as when I let the camera autofocus. If autofocus gives consistently sharper results, does that suggest a problem with the camera, or is manual focus simply harder to do accurately on this model? Are there settings or viewfinder adjustments I should check to improve manual-focus accuracy?
Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
Photography Stack Exchange contributor
13y ago
2 Answers
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Logic would say that if you are getting better results on auto, then why go manual? Manual is for those situations where auto won't cut it or is not appropriate.
To delve more into why you are getting poor results, we might need to know what it is you are actually doing, because saying "set the camera to auto" is ambiguous: you could mean you are switching the focusing from manual to auto focusing, or you could mean that you are changing the camera mode to the Full Auto mode.
Manual focusing:
This is relatively difficult on many modern DSLRs with ground-glass screens, or for that matter cameras with LCDs, though at least the latter might give you the option to have a zoomed-in preview while manual focusing.
The ground-glass screens on older DSLRs typically had a focusing guide in the centre of the screen which was basically a bunch of different angles cut into the glass, and the image had to line up on all the angled segments to indicate that it's in focus. It was a much more accurate way to manually focus than just looking directly at the ground glass image, which is soft due to the nature of ground glass anyway. Sadly the ground glass screens of low end modern DSLRs don't tend to have focus guides; they expect you will be automatically focusing.
If you do want to manually focus, you just need to work at it. Realise that a lot of the time what looks sharp on the ground glass won't be perfectly sharp, and you need to turn the focus back and forwards until you are in the "middle" of the "sharp" zone.
AF modes
Your camera will have multiple autofocus "zones", and it needs to know where in the picture you want it to attempt to focus.
You can set the camera to focus at a particular focus zone (centre or manual), or to automatically select all. This is your focus mode selection.
In the camera's full-auto mode, it usually will usually be set to the latter, so that people don't need to think about focusing (this is basically the case on all point-and-shoot cameras too). It will look at all of its autofocus zones and try to focus on whichever ones it thinks you most likely want. This will work a lot of the time, but fail sometimes.
If you set it to a manually-selected autofocus zone, or manually select one of the autofocus zones with the arrows, then it will ONLY look to focus in that one zone. You must be aiming the camera so that the subject you want to focus on is in that zone.
Originally by user3422. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
user3422
13y ago
0
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It’s probably not a fault with the D7000. In normal conditions, autofocus is often more accurate and consistent than manual focus on modern DSLRs.
Manual focus can be harder because DSLR focusing screens are not always optimized for precise hand-focusing the way older cameras were. So if autofocus works well in the scene, it usually makes sense to use it.
A few things to check:
- Make sure you really mean manual focus vs. autofocus, not switching the whole camera to full auto mode.
- Watch the focus confirmation indicator in the viewfinder when focusing manually; it can help verify focus.
- Check the viewfinder diopter adjustment. If it’s set wrong for your eyesight, the viewfinder image may look sharp to you even when focus is off.
- Be aware that some Nikon focus/release settings allow the camera to take a shot even if focus is not confirmed, so a frame can still be captured slightly out of focus.
In short: if autofocus is reliably sharper, that usually points to manual-focus technique or viewfinder setup rather than an internal camera problem.
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