Hasselblad H4D-40 Specification Guide

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DIGITAL CAMERAS
www.hasselblad.com
The plane of focus changes when the camera is tilted for composition.
True Focus and Absolute Position Lock 
True Focus helps solve one of the most lingering challenges that 
faces serious photographers today: true, accurate focusing through-
out the image field. Without multi-point auto-focus a typical auto-
focus camera can only correctly measure focus on a subject that is 
in the center of the image. When a photographer wants to focus on a 
subject outside the center area, they have to lock focus on the sub-
ject and then re-compose the image. In short distances especially, 
this re-composing causes focus error, as the plane of focus sharp-
ness follows the camera’s movement, perpendicular to the axis of 
the lens.
The traditional solution for most DSLR cameras has been to equip 
the camera with a multi-point AF sensor. These sensors allow the 
photographer to fix an off-center focus point on an off-center sub-
ject, which is then focused correctly. Such multi-point AF solutions 
are often tedious and inflexible to work with. Due to the physics of 
an SLR-camera, the off-center focus points that are offered are all 
clustered relatively close to the center of the image. To set focus 
outside of this center area, the photographer is still forced to focus 
first, and then shift the camera to reframe, with the resulting loss 
of focus as a result.
To overcome this problem, Hasselblad has used modern yaw rate 
sensor technology to measure angular velocity in an innovative 
way. The result is the new Absolute Position Lock (APL) processor, 
which forms the foundation of Hasselblad’s True Focus feature. 
The APL processor accurately logs camera movement during any 
re-composing, then uses these exact measurements to calculate 
the necessary focus adjustment, and issues the proper commands 
to the lens’s focus motor so it can compensate. The APL processor 
computes the advanced positional algorithms and carries out the 
required focus corrections at such rapid speed that no shutter lag 
occurs. The H4D’s firmware then further perfects the focus using 
the precise data retrieval system found on all H System lenses.
The middle image shows the result when not using True Focus. While this image looks relatively 
sharp, the rightmost image where True Focus has been used, is razor sharp.  
Photo: Marcel Pabst