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They do indeed make a plate with a #1 hole.I've looked at the Cambo Actus for GFX but I don't really know anything about the lenses being offered. Your description of the 110xl in conjunction with your pic got my curiosity up but the modifications are frankly worrisome. I'll have to look but I wonder if the Cambo has a lens board for these Schnieder lenses.see with earlier post. Cheers.
I always heard it as 2 stops on the Canon forum. That might have been true for their big Whites which I've never used but Canon's WA lenses circa 2003 were more like 3-4 stops. But, I rented the Zeiss Otus 55/1.4 and realized that this old conventional wisdom doesn't have to be. With this lens, f1.4 was as sharp in the corners as my Canons were at f8. A lens doesn't have to incur diffraction to get the corners in focus. All it takes are customers with money and a company willing to service that market.In general the sweet spot for any lens begins 3 or 4 notches from wide open.
The Otus 55/1.4 performance is OK wide open, and spectacular stopped down to f/2.I always heard it as 2 stops on the Canon forum. That might have been true for their big Whites which I've never used but Canon's WA lenses circa 2003 were more like 3-4 stops. But, I rented the Zeiss Otus 55/1.4 and realized that this old conventional wisdom doesn't have to be. With this lens, f1.4 was as sharp in the corners as my Canons were at f8. A lens doesn't have to incur diffraction to get the corners in focus. All it takes are customers with money and a company willing to service that market.In general the sweet spot for any lens begins 3 or 4 notches from wide open.
This is different from what you said here:copy and paste...
In general, this sweet spot is between two or three stops down from the maximum aperture. For example, for a lens that has a maximum aperture of f/1.4, the sweetspot normally falls between f/2.8 and f/4. For a lens that has a maximum apertureof f/4, it's between f/8 and f/11.
On axis testing that I've done with lots of lenses confirms that many don't conform to that so-called "rule". And the later designs see to conform to it less. I'm talking excellent lenses here, like the Fuji G lenses.The sweet-spot of a given lense begins at least 2 stops down from wide open and covers a range of 3 to 4 stops for maximum sharpness. This is true for the majority of lenses made.
Now if you can point to a source that states differently I would like to read it.
Not the 110:You have not disproven the rule at all. I asked you to give me a source for your claims and all you have done is deflect from what is true for the majority of lenses made including the Fujifilm GF lenses.
Oh, my. You're a new kid on this MF block, it seems.I mean a credible source.
That's enough of that - personal attacks are not accepted here, posts deleted, and you'll not be coming back to the MF forumI mean a credible source. Show me one expert who agrees with you.
The fact remains that the lens' performance wide open changed my perception of what is possible in lens design.The Otus 55/1.4 performance is OK wide open, and spectacular stopped down to f/2.I always heard it as 2 stops on the Canon forum. That might have been true for their big Whites which I've never used but Canon's WA lenses circa 2003 were more like 3-4 stops. But, I rented the Zeiss Otus 55/1.4 and realized that this old conventional wisdom doesn't have to be. With this lens, f1.4 was as sharp in the corners as my Canons were at f8. A lens doesn't have to incur diffraction to get the corners in focus. All it takes are customers with money and a company willing to service that market.In general the sweet spot for any lens begins 3 or 4 notches from wide open.
Jim
Thanks. I would have never recognized this description "copal-1 shutter or NK-1 aperture mount" as a Schneider characteristic.They do indeed make a plate with a #1 hole.I've looked at the Cambo Actus for GFX but I don't really know anything about the lenses being offered. Your description of the 110xl in conjunction with your pic got my curiosity up but the modifications are frankly worrisome. I'll have to look but I wonder if the Cambo has a lens board for these Schnieder lenses.see with earlier post. Cheers.
https://www.cambo.com/en/actus-series/actus-gfx-view-camera/
You want the ACB-1.
Jim
Thanks. I would have never recognized this description "copal-1 shutter or NK-1 aperture mount" as a Schneider characteristic.They do indeed make a plate with a #1 hole.I've looked at the Cambo Actus for GFX but I don't really know anything about the lenses being offered. Your description of the 110xl in conjunction with your pic got my curiosity up but the modifications are frankly worrisome. I'll have to look but I wonder if the Cambo has a lens board for these Schnieder lenses.see with earlier post. Cheers.
https://www.cambo.com/en/actus-series/actus-gfx-view-camera/
You want the ACB-1.
Jim
So, Airy disk is 15.2 um in diameter, that is (15.2/2)^2 * Pi -> 181 um^2 according to my HP 32S. A pixel has 5.3x5.3 -> 29 um^2At f/22, does the lens you choose matter much wrt sharpness? Airy disk is 15.2 um for 555 nm light, and Sparrow distance is 12.4 nm, so the lens would have to have a lot of aberrations to override the diffraction. To put the 15 um number in perspective, the pixel pitch of the GFX 50x is 5.3 um.No focus stacking in this image, f22.
Jim
Hi,The sweet-spot of a given lense begins at least 2 stops down from wide open and covers a range of 3 to 4 stops for maximum sharpness. This is true for the majority of lenses made.
Now if you can point to a source that states differently I would like to read it.
Beautiful. Congrats!I issue a challenge to produce an image sharper than this and with equal intensity of color. Gfx 50r mounted on Linhof 4x5 and Schneider Super Symmar 100xl. This lens is regarded as one of the finest in the world of large format photography. Image taken from a distance of six feet. Sorry but I am so astonished on what the gfx and the linhof combo can produce.
View attachment ad472304dc4c48b495f6d74196c04699.jpg
Gfx rocks!
First off, I don't relish learning a whole new set of jargon. And, if it doesn't snap, screw or twist on easily, I'm out.I can tell you’ve never spent much time with large format cameras. Wait till you see what you do to mount the lens to the lens board.Thanks. I would have never recognized this description "copal-1 shutter or NK-1 aperture mount" as a Schneider characteristic.They do indeed make a plate with a #1 hole.I've looked at the Cambo Actus for GFX but I don't really know anything about the lenses being offered. Your description of the 110xl in conjunction with your pic got my curiosity up but the modifications are frankly worrisome. I'll have to look but I wonder if the Cambo has a lens board for these Schnieder lenses.see with earlier post. Cheers.
https://www.cambo.com/en/actus-series/actus-gfx-view-camera/
You want the ACB-1.
Jim