Bill – The one general comment one can make about trends in lenses over the past 10 or 12 years is that while the optical quality has gone up with each successive generation, the mechanical quality has gone down. Metal parts have been replaced with plastics; and while there are many places that plastics can and do outperform metals, in many cases design decisions have been made solely to reduce costs. In many of these cases, the longevity and functionality of the product has been compromised. While this is quite understandable for consumer products, it does bother me when these changes creep into the high-end professional offerings.
I think there is plenty of evidence this lack of hard stop for the infinity setting is just a cost reduction move, and unless you are focusing manually, it is something most photographers will likely never notice.
Your statement is absolutely correct for lenses for still cameras. Parfocal lenses are only important to video shooters when they are doing those nice and smooth zooms in and out, so this feature is found on video camera lenses.Zoom lenses can be either parfocal or varifocal.
Parfocal means the zoom lens WILL keep focus in the same Plane of Sharp Focus as the Lens is zoomed.
Varifocal means the zoom lens WILL NOT keep focus in the same Plane of Sharp Focus as the Lens zooms.
I believe that it is fair to say that MOST zoom lenses are varifocal.
The other feature that video shooters (as macro shooters) look for is a lack of focus breathing throughout the zoom range, as we don’t want the size of the image to change as we change focus in a scene[/QUOTE]
I don’t think this comment is correct, as the infinity reference is a base reference for many lens design parameters and everything else is measured back from this point. As an example, the zoom lens focal lengths are quoted at infinity, and they do shorten as you focus on closer objects. My old manual zoom has a hard stop at infinity.Therefore, for most zoom lenses the point of ‘infinity focus’ on the Focus Turret is actually slightly different, depending at what Focal Length the zoom is set. It would make VERY LITTLE (i.e. NONE) difference to the final image if the lens is actually focussed ‘at infinity’: but it is another viable yet very tiny reason we could suggest as to why zoom lenses, can focus past infinity.
This is one I’ve heard before and I agree with you, it makes no sense. The linear coefficient of thermal expansion of glass runs in the 3µm/m/K to 9 µm /m/K range. This is well below the manufacturing tolerances of the lens (an in fact getting into the wavelength of light range). The metal used in mounting the optical elements (aluminum and steel) have a considerably higher coefficient of expansion than glass. For aluminum, it’s coefficient of expansion is about three times higher than glass, and if you look at the amount of aluminum in the mechanisms of a lens, you will have a lot larger, yet still insignificant, impact from those components. Manufacturing tolerances, including those related to moving the lens elements around to zoom and focus have a far greater impact than any thermal expansion / contraction impacts.There’s always been a lot a clatter and drama about “temperature” and the “lens elements getting hot and expanding” therefore “infinity focus changing its position” - I don’t have much faith at all in that explanation. I think we’d need to be inside a blast furnace. .
No, going past the lenses infinity setting is going to throw things out of focus. In fact a hard stop would ensure what you suggest would ensure that this could not happen. Instead we have to rely on the camera's electronics to ensure that the camera never attempts to focus past infinity (which would in fact reduce image sharpness).BUT – on hot days there could be haze on the horizon and that might confuse the AF . . . any AF lens can therefore bounce around attempting to lock onto “infinity focus” . . . hence the explanation about why there is NOT a hard ‘buffer stop’ in AF lenses – and I believe if we dig deep enough into the ‘why’ of Auto Focus Lens Technology, Research and Development, the ‘soft ending at infinity’ explanation is the main reason why (‘modern’ aka ‘Auto Focus’) lenses can go past the infinity marker.
Again, I believe I am correct that eliminating the hard stop is merely a cost saving measure by the lens manufacturers. If the camera electronics can do it, so why bother with the costly mechanical alignment process on an optical bench for those relatively few people looking for this feature. From a manufacturing process, this is a fairly costly step and the savings will help protect the lenses price point and the manufacturers profit margins.
Only one of my autofocus lenses; the Nikkor AF 50mm f1.8D still has the traditional hard stop at infinity. It is an older screw drive design and relies on the camera's focus motor. I did some testing on it before writing this. Focusing to infinity results in a "soft landing", the drive never does a hard stop on the infinity setting, even though the focus lines up perfectly with the mark on the camera barrel. This is not true for the close up focus as there is a clear "thunk" as the lens hits a hard stop.