windraider
Member
Hi any Olympus XA users out there?
Ive been using an XA for the last 20yrs & have noticed the following:
When focusing at objects between 0.85-2m, resolution of the subjects seem to be soft at apertures lower than f5.6. Particularly at f2.8, subject seems to be out of focus (resolution of background is soft but not as bad as subject). Ive already checked the rangefinder accuracy by comparing lens distance readouts to measurements made via a measuring tape. The problem is gone and subject is sharp (together with background) at f8.
Anyone have a similar experience? Is this a limitation of the retro-focus lens short focus throw or is a lens alignment problem?
Additionally when using flash in low light situations (handheld), subjects 1.5-3m away tend to be overexposed & seems out of focus, but background is usually OK.
Also from a user perspective, how would you rate the performance the XAs lens?
My dad commented that resolution seems soft when compared with his 50/1.4 AIS Nikkor.
Would appreciate any inputs from all users.
Ive been using an XA for the last 20yrs & have noticed the following:
When focusing at objects between 0.85-2m, resolution of the subjects seem to be soft at apertures lower than f5.6. Particularly at f2.8, subject seems to be out of focus (resolution of background is soft but not as bad as subject). Ive already checked the rangefinder accuracy by comparing lens distance readouts to measurements made via a measuring tape. The problem is gone and subject is sharp (together with background) at f8.
Anyone have a similar experience? Is this a limitation of the retro-focus lens short focus throw or is a lens alignment problem?
Additionally when using flash in low light situations (handheld), subjects 1.5-3m away tend to be overexposed & seems out of focus, but background is usually OK.
Also from a user perspective, how would you rate the performance the XAs lens?
My dad commented that resolution seems soft when compared with his 50/1.4 AIS Nikkor.
Would appreciate any inputs from all users.