Ah okay, that lens doesn't have a focus servo.
Source:
https://www.fujifilm.com/sg/en/business ... indicationThat being said- if you want electronic focus you'd need a different lens.
A few other things that may be helpful to know: (I don't know what you already know so I'm casting a wide net here.)
As for back focus- that's a B4 specific thing. My understanding is that in the early days of lens interchangeability not every manufacturer set their prism/sensor the same distance from the lens so there's a secondary focus in the back of the lens.
You can tell when your back focus is set properly when you're able to zoom in and out on an object without losing focus. This is known as a 'parfocal' lens (which is standard for B4 lenses). EF lenses generally aren't parfocal so if you're coming from the DSLR world this'll be new to you.
Canon does make an EF lens series with a zoom rocker handle that's parfocal called Compact Servo. They're unusual in that it's a unique combination.
Since the UBG2 is meant to operate as a hybrid camera there are a few assumptions that BMD made-
1. If you're doing broadcast you'll probably want a B4 parfocal lens. As such, their B4 adapter's optical piece aligns the lens area with the 4k area of the sensor. This allows you to get up to 60fps.
2. If you're doing cinema work you're probably using PL or EF lenses. These hit the full sensor (super 35 sized) but the full sensor caps out at 50fps. This is okay though as you're probably only shooting 24 or 48fps. You can crop down to 4k with a cinema lens attached.
Bonus- since this is a hybrid camera you get some of the benefits of broadcast world that you wouldn't necessarily get in the cinema world. Notably, hot pixel detection. Inevitably, individual pixels go bad over time on a sensor (called hot pixels). In the cinema / post production world you can fix this after you shoot. In the broadcast world you're often sending from the camera straight to a mixer so you have to be able to fix that in the camera. BMD has a process for this that's fully automated. After having the camera a few months you may see a few initial hot pixels. Run the process and then after that it maye be hundreds of hours before you see any more. The better you are at keeping the sensor cool the better. The temperature of your sensor is very important! If you don't choke your camera, don't leave it on over the weekend, and keep it free of excessive dust you'll be fine.
One last thing to note- Autofocus isn't really a thing in the broadcast and cinema world which is why no BMD cameras have it aside from to focus. Generally, a broadcast camera OP is so familiar with their camera and lens that they can almost instantly focus manually faster and more accurately than autofocus. I highly, highly recommend turning on the focus assist for highlighting edges. It's immensely helpful for manual focus.