Some people here know that I like numbers, for example this MTF versus that MTF, while others might prefer shrubbery shots to compare sharpness with.
Anyhow, back on topic, I was trying to manually focus a Pentax Super-Takumar 28mm on a wall target with a Sigma SD15. AF not possible, the Tak. has no electronics. But with the Sigma, a sort of AF should be possible by turning the focus ring back and forth until it beeps and a green light comes on in the optical viewfinder. So, l made sure the center-point only (a cross-type) was selected and then looked up the camera's sensitivity in the manual - a fairly good range 0 to 18 EV. Oh whoopee, I go because 0 EV is almost darkness well below the light impinging on my wall ...
... nope! No beeps, no green light, even tho' my old Sekonic tells me
7 EV's worth of exposure value is flooding my target. So I trained a few more lights on the wall, cranked down the lens from f/8 to f/5.6 and tried again. Sure enough, there were beeps and the green light lit, so I joyfully took a shot. I also took another shot focusing by eye through the finder, just to compare.
Hmmm .... which is which? ...
Yep, you guessed it; the left was what I got from the
stupid green light and the right was from using my eyeball!
So, it looks like the Sigma AF sensor is easily fooled - or my simpleton's view of what a cross-type sensor can do is just plain wrong. I'm sure "most of us" know better.