Robert E. Segrell Jr |
Filters
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anonymous |
I think you have bought filters for manual focus cameras, filters are different for manual and auto focus cameras. Check at your local camera shop, they will be able to tell you for sure. I think you can use auto focus filters on either, but manual focus filters can only go on manual focus cameras. If you can switch your camera to manual focus, does that help? If so, I think I have answered correctly.
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Jon Close |
Only a polarizing filter has a specific type for use with autofocus cameras - Circular Polarizer v. Linear Polarizer. For all other filters there is no difference. I can't tell from the sample whether the camera is mis-focusing, or if it is just a really bad filter. One problem in the "with filter" photo is that there is a shadow at the lower right. Something is blocking the light from the flash (the filter and adapter?). The adapter may also be blocking the camera's AF assist light, making AF difficult and unreliable in low light.
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Maynard McKillen |
Dear Robert: It may be time to take a close look at that filter. Is it labelled a UV? Is it new? If used, did someone etch the suface, spray it with hairspray or otherwise try and make it into a soft focus filter? Could it be mislabelled as a UV when it is really something else?? Doesn't that camera model take 52mm screw-in filters? What brand of filters are these four that you have? Have you got another camera to which you can attach these filters, as another means of testing them?
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