Hi Nikon people,
I know there are a fair few Nikon D90 owners out there and some that shoot wildlife with long lenses.
What I need to know is this; have you found it necessary to use the auto-focus offset memory feature* when swapping between lenses?
The problem I have had with my Sigma 18-250mm on my new D5000 was that if I focused on something, I got the peep-peep, but it focused say 5% behind where it should. i.e. the calibration of auto-focus was off. It took a few weeks to convince myself this was bad enough to complain about and that it wasn't just me using an inappropriate focusing mode, or the subject had moved, etc.
This was only an issue at the 250mm end and occured whether I was shooting across a 50m wide river, or a butterfly at 18"; if I went to 100% pixel view, my shots were clearly mostly NOT focused where the should be, fortunately the Nikon software can display (in PP) which focus point was in use to confirm.
Here's a gallery of real world test shots: http://www.pbase.com/dhumphries/testdemoshots
The 'test_100' shots are screen snips of the 100% view, showing the focus point (red box). Very telling are the butterfly and the Heron, where I focused in front of the subject deliberately, just look where it's sharpest.
Anyway, as I'd shunned the internet in favour of a dealer ('thank heavens' as it turns out), I went back and eventually we got some tripod mounted, self-timer taken test shots off with 3 lenses; a Sigma 18-200, a Nikon 18-200 and my 18-250. These, of an A4 sheet of paper shot at an oblique angle, with an obvious focus point, the text was sharpest both fore and aft of the focus point on the other two lenses, but not mine, which was sharper behind the supposedly focused point. With those shots in the bag, (or on a CD) the lens has gone back to Sigma for calibration, return eagerly awaited.
The dealer has kindly lent me a s/h Nikon 18-70mm older kit lens to keep me going, but imagine my dismay when, even at 70mm, this too is apparently displaying a smaller but noticeable tendency to focus past where it should. So, even if the Sigma comes back OK, this makes me fearful of buying any other lens without careful checking in future, as I don't want to be here again.
Now, the D5000 doesn't have any memories for lenses, but I gather the D90 does and this includes a focus offset (true?), if so do you use it?
Or am I just unlucky (twice), or too critical?
Thanks in advance, and I apologise for the long and rambling post.
Cheers,