daveleo
what?
What does AWB mean?
It means one defers decisions about parameter optimization (in this case color temperature) to strangers who can not anticipate every possible circumstance required to optimize the parameter(s) of interest.
Often AWB can not succeed (regardless of camera brand). AWB does not work when a scene is lit by two or more strong light sources with very different color temperatures. A few common examples would be: blue color casts in shadows when a scene is lit by daylight; an interior where one are is lit by tungsten light and another is dominated by outdoor light from windows. AWB is impossible because a single set of color temperature parameters is insufficient.
I understood the impossibilty of getting mixed-light colors correct in complex light situations, by setting a single degK to establish the colors.
What surprised me is that a uniform color shift (caused by an 81A filter) in a single light-source image was not even "corrected" accurately, when set to "auto WB".