Yes, I had played with this sort of thing with one of our Gokosha autocollimators (I forget the fl). These had a threaded collar that allowed fine (and precise) adjustment of the objective lens so that different distances could be mimicked, looking into the front of the collector. With the collar set at zero it was an infinity target, and could be verified via a flat mirror in front of the autocollimator. If the film position changes one simply rotates the autocollimator barrel until focus is again achieved (via the autocollimator eyepiece). Then read the distance off the barrel. Using the classic formula 1/f = 1/u + 1/v one can figure how far the film surface moved. Note: f = autocollimator fl, u and f are the conjugate distances of the lens.
As a note the autocollimator is mainly looking only at a small area near the center of the film.
Yes, and the manual for the c6400 has a chart with the test lens distance scale values already calculated. The c6800 actually has the calculated distance marks engraved on the barrel along side the millimeter marks.
In both cases, however, the numbers only work when the collimator lens is the appropriate distance from the film plane when the measurement is being obtained (120mm or 150mm).
