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<blockquote data-quote="PaulPosition" data-source="post: 325238" data-attributes="member: 25700"><p>Never tested for it, my camera had no adjustment so I prefer not to know, lol.</p><p></p><p>But, really, you probably could get a good idea of the situation by placing a ruler and a flat plane (a book, sheet of paper, ...) beside it, standing up. You focus at the sheet with a small-ish dof, shoot then look at where on the ruler the focus has fallen. Should help you gauge whether it is front-focusing or back-focusing and whether you could live with it or pursue troubleshooting steps.</p><p></p><p>I'm sure there are great tutorials out there.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="PaulPosition, post: 325238, member: 25700"] Never tested for it, my camera had no adjustment so I prefer not to know, lol. But, really, you probably could get a good idea of the situation by placing a ruler and a flat plane (a book, sheet of paper, ...) beside it, standing up. You focus at the sheet with a small-ish dof, shoot then look at where on the ruler the focus has fallen. Should help you gauge whether it is front-focusing or back-focusing and whether you could live with it or pursue troubleshooting steps. I'm sure there are great tutorials out there. [/QUOTE]
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