Alec Moreno
September 13th, 2010, 12:04 AM
I just keep finding something to complain about on the NX5...
On a recent shoot, I had backfocus issues for about ten minutes, and then the problem disappeared. I zoomed in and set focus correctly each time, and when I zoomed back out to frame my shots they were consistently blurry. (I had the macrofocus turned off and the camera was definitely set to manual focus.) Several minutes prior, I had been gathering similar shots with no problem at all. After this ten minute window, the camera held focus properly for the rest of the shoot.
I should have thought to turn off the camera and turn it back on again to see if it would help, but it never crossed my mind as I thought backfocus was a mechanical issue. I don't actually recall whether I powered down the camera after the problem period or not. If I did, that might have been solution. If not, then I'm at a loss for an explanation as to why the problem ceased.
Here's a related problem. When I first got this camera, I was testing the difference between shooting with the macrofocus turned on and off. In my tests, I noticed that the camera would not hold focus on distant subjects when I had the macrofocus turned on. This seemed a little odd to me but I assumed that this was just how the camera was designed...that I would just need to be very careful about selecting the proper setting depending on my proximity to the subject in each shot. After last night's fiasco though, I tested this again and now the camera is holding focus on distant subjects regardless of whether the macrofocus is turned on or off. I have not been able to duplicate either problem since.
I got somewhat lucky on this last shoot as the shots I missed due to this were not the most critical to the event, but if it had happened at the wrong time, it could have been disastrous.
I know there were some backfocus issues with the earlier NX5's as Mark Von Lanken detailed in his review, but I checked my serial number again and it's definitely a more recent camera, bought a little over a month ago. So my question is...has anyone else run into a similar problem? If so, what solution did you find? If sending the camera back to Sony was the only option, how quick were they about getting it fixed (did they make it a priority over other repairs)? Were there any additional charges (though I can't imagine a fee for a problem like this)?
Alec Moreno
Wedding Art Films - Southern California - Los Angeles - Orange County - Video (http://www.WeddingArtFilms.com)
On a recent shoot, I had backfocus issues for about ten minutes, and then the problem disappeared. I zoomed in and set focus correctly each time, and when I zoomed back out to frame my shots they were consistently blurry. (I had the macrofocus turned off and the camera was definitely set to manual focus.) Several minutes prior, I had been gathering similar shots with no problem at all. After this ten minute window, the camera held focus properly for the rest of the shoot.
I should have thought to turn off the camera and turn it back on again to see if it would help, but it never crossed my mind as I thought backfocus was a mechanical issue. I don't actually recall whether I powered down the camera after the problem period or not. If I did, that might have been solution. If not, then I'm at a loss for an explanation as to why the problem ceased.
Here's a related problem. When I first got this camera, I was testing the difference between shooting with the macrofocus turned on and off. In my tests, I noticed that the camera would not hold focus on distant subjects when I had the macrofocus turned on. This seemed a little odd to me but I assumed that this was just how the camera was designed...that I would just need to be very careful about selecting the proper setting depending on my proximity to the subject in each shot. After last night's fiasco though, I tested this again and now the camera is holding focus on distant subjects regardless of whether the macrofocus is turned on or off. I have not been able to duplicate either problem since.
I got somewhat lucky on this last shoot as the shots I missed due to this were not the most critical to the event, but if it had happened at the wrong time, it could have been disastrous.
I know there were some backfocus issues with the earlier NX5's as Mark Von Lanken detailed in his review, but I checked my serial number again and it's definitely a more recent camera, bought a little over a month ago. So my question is...has anyone else run into a similar problem? If so, what solution did you find? If sending the camera back to Sony was the only option, how quick were they about getting it fixed (did they make it a priority over other repairs)? Were there any additional charges (though I can't imagine a fee for a problem like this)?
Alec Moreno
Wedding Art Films - Southern California - Los Angeles - Orange County - Video (http://www.WeddingArtFilms.com)