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Infinity Focus is not quite right

...means that the problem you are having is not within any lens, but the issue of focus 'mismatch' (between the viewfinder and the focal plane)

Except that @mehguy has not yet determined if this exists. As far as I can tell, he hasn't encountered any issue with out of focus photos.
He has simply noted a small discrepancy between the markings on the lenses, and his estimate of distances, when the viewfinder indicates the subject is in focus.
 
Except that @mehguy has not yet determined if this exists. As far as I can tell, he hasn't encountered any issue with out of focus photos.

Yes, as far as we know the camera might be functioning perfectly. The viewfinder focus aids might be perfectly calibrated to render an in-focus image on the film when the viewfinder says the image is in focus. We have no confirmation if this is true or not.
 
Can you please point me to source of this info?

Here is one of the few references that quantify Infinity in any terms beyond an informal 'across the fence' description...


Someone who was (still is???) affiliated with Northwestern University wrote this response:
"Leonard Evens​
22-Aug-2008, 18:10​
"Infinity" for photographic lenses is 1500 X the focal length.

It's always nice to have a definite number, but how many of us are going to calculate 1500 x the focal length in units we are familiar with, and then measure out that distance in the scene. Also, as I tried to explain above, there is no one distance which is effectively `at infinity'. It all depends on close you have to be to the focal plane before you can no longer tell the difference. That in turn depends on the focal length and how closely you look as well a what you are trying to accomplish.

Let me give a simple method which anyone can use without making distance measurements. This would apply when you really do want to focus `at infinity' rather than just having infinity adequately in focus, in which case you would use the hyperfocal distance.

Focus on two or three very distant points. See if there is any focus spread on the rail among them. If within the accuracy that you can focus they are all at the same place, then you are focused for all practical purposes at infinity. You won't do better than this by measuring out 1500 X the focal length or 750 X the focal length or 3000 X the focal length or whatever.​
...as part of this thread. https://www.largeformatphotography.... infinity,are usually marked at about 60 feet.
 
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