Thanks.
I don't undserstand your note about a pictorial application (1000:1),
William?

All I really want is to be able to jugde my lenses - before or after
purshase...:-). Since I mainly shoot digital now, I want to use my *ist D
for thesting the lenses. And I want to be able to choose the right lens for
the right job (of cource it would be a lot better to just have access to a
wide range of state of the art/pro lenses for everything  :-).

I already found that my 2.8/105mm is tiny bit sharper than the 2.5/135mm.

And it would be fun to actually know how much my *ist D can really do. I
often tested my SONY against my Pentax bodies. The Sony did (too) well in
practice! Now I want to test the *ist D. I guess the right thing is to
compare prints as well as digital images (scanned/processed vs.
recorded/processed).

Finally:
90 lpm is not bad at all, is it. Many lenses can't reslove that much on
film.

Jens Bladt
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt


-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sendt: 2. november 2004 19:20
Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Emne: Re: USAF target and resolution tests



----- Original Message -----
From: "Jens Bladt"
Subject: RE: USAF target and resolution tests



> Anyway, it's not possible to actaully PRINT 98 lpm from a neg. Only
> the film
> (or slide) can produce this kind of resolution.

Even this is unlikely in pictorial applications.
Do a quick check of the Fuji website (they seem to have the finest
grain at the moment, and they actually publish the data), and you
will find that somewhere in the range of 90 lmm is about the best you
can get.
Note 1000:1 is NOT a pictorial application.

William Robb




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