Garry Matthews
January 3rd, 2005, 05:04 AM
I supppose maybe it's not a real bug, but a loophole in the self-calibration system of the zoom ring.
It appears that the zoom is not permanently calibrated at the factory, but calibrates itself each time the camera is switched on.
The "ring" and the "lever" action can be misaligned. I can replicate this behaviour easily, I wonder if anyone else can?
Switch the camera on, set the zoom into "ring" mode, then put it about half-way in it's zoom-range. Switch the camera off. Switch it back on again, and then push the ring all the way up into full wide-zoom. Now, if you switch into "lever" mode, you'll find that you can pull back further still (at least I can) by a few degrees. If you toggle the mode switch back into "ring" mode, the camera "zooms-in" slightly.
This misalignment continues happening for as long as you like, until you do a full tele-zoom, and then it seems to correct itself.
When I first came across this, I became worried, and thought I had a dud zoom mechanism. But later I found that it self-corrects.
It appears that the zoom is not permanently calibrated at the factory, but calibrates itself each time the camera is switched on.
The "ring" and the "lever" action can be misaligned. I can replicate this behaviour easily, I wonder if anyone else can?
Switch the camera on, set the zoom into "ring" mode, then put it about half-way in it's zoom-range. Switch the camera off. Switch it back on again, and then push the ring all the way up into full wide-zoom. Now, if you switch into "lever" mode, you'll find that you can pull back further still (at least I can) by a few degrees. If you toggle the mode switch back into "ring" mode, the camera "zooms-in" slightly.
This misalignment continues happening for as long as you like, until you do a full tele-zoom, and then it seems to correct itself.
When I first came across this, I became worried, and thought I had a dud zoom mechanism. But later I found that it self-corrects.