There is no doubt that these images suffered from the heavy crop and the resulting lack of pixels. I wasn't trying to illustrate how well the 7D images held up to a heavy crop. I was trying to show that it held focus for an extended period of time against 3 different BGs with a subject occupying a relatively small portion of the frame. To me this is the real test of the 7D's AF for BIF. Had the heron occupied 2/3 of the frame, I'm sure there would have been a lot more detail. But it would have flown across my field of view in about a second. For a test like this, you need the bird to be somewhat far away. When the birds are in close I normally fire off bursts of 2 or 3 frames, but this was a 20 frame sequence. I can show you plenty of 100% crops of flying birds that occupy a substantially bigger portion of the frame and have a lot more detail, but I'm not sure how useful images like that are when evaluating AI Servo AF.
While not tac-sharp by the frame-filling bird standard, the 2 images that I processed from this series look pretty good IMO. I'm going to post a couple of 100% crops of BIF where the bird occupies a large portion of the frame.
Here's a 100% crop of a flying gull; Lightroom to Photoshop with no editing whatsoever. Plenty of detail.







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