MGRPhoto
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2014
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- 149
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- Pittsburgh
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I don't know if that's true, I've never seen it in writing and that's not the way it behaves. AF continues if the selected point is not on the subject when in a dynamic mode. If you're saying that's because the selected focus point is doing it based upon information passed to it...well, that's the same result as if the other point had directly caused the change.It's using limited data from surrounding focus points to keep a "virtual" lock on the primary selected focus point so that the selected focus point can instantly resume when enough of the subject returns to the selected focus point. The surrounding focus points are essentially passing their data to the primary focus point so that the camera thinks the primary focus point is always in focus.
It also seems like that would be a daft way to design the system... it adds another step which would slow the system with no benefit.
Sometimes it's not such a good idea to read a manual word for word and believe it means exactly what it says (seems to say).... especially if it's something translated from another language.
You've seen it in writing from Nikon's own definition just a couple posts ago and that IS the way it behaves. If the subject leave the selected focus point for more than a second or so then it refocuses on the tree (or whatever) that is now where the subject used to be. If it was using the secondary focus point to focus... then it would just switch to the secondary focus point and there actually would be no difference between 3D tracking and Dynamic AF. When a subject leaves the selected focus point in 3D tracking it doesn't wait... it doesn't rely on any data from other focus points it just switches to the other focus point.