Originally Posted by
Inkanyezi
As already stated, the loss of AF points is when the MAXIMUM aperture is smaller, and the crucial point there is the exit pupil of the lens. The secondary mirror or light level are not relevant, but the phase detection system and its way of working.
To analyse the sharpness of the image, the phase detection receptors are receiving light from different parts of the exit pupil of the lens. half of the sensor segments aiming at one point of the exit pupil, the other half at another. When stopping the lens down, these points may be obscured by the diaphragm, so that phase detector AF sensors will not receive any light. Phase detectors that are away from the centre of the image will lose one side of the lens before the other, while the one in the middle will lose both at the same time. Therefore, those further out will lose their ability to analyse juxtaposition of left/right parts earlier than the one in the middle. Typically this may be at wider than f/8 for the ones off centre, but at about f/8 for the centre point.
Hence, the OP conception is erroneous. No phase detection points are lost when using a smaller aperture with an automatic lens, as measurement is always done with the lens wide open.