At those sources who have done proper tests, e.g. me or our member Tim Parkin:
www.drumscanning.co.uk
I know Tim and he is a very trustworthy and reliable source.
A lot depends on the films (and developers with BW) and on the testing methods. And also on your workflow: There are imaging chains which offer a big dynamic range, and others who limit the DR.
Depending on the film up to 11 stops.
E.g. I have done tests in my test lab / studio in which I've created different contrast ranges with lights on a scene.
The transparencies after that were evaluated optically by eye.
On a light table under a slide loupe I could see about 8 stops with Provia 100F.
With new E100 a little bit (0.3 to 0.5stops) less.
Velvia 50 had about 7 stops, and Velvia 100 about 6.5 stops.
ADOX Scala 50 about 9 stops.
Evaluation of these test shots in projection with my 250W projector on my Da-Lite High-Power screen delivered about 0.5 stops higher values (better shadow detail).
Tim Parkin did tests with his drum scanner resulting in a 10 stops DR with Velvia 50, 11 stops with Provia 100F.
Real Drum Scanners with photo-multiplyers are extremely powerful concerning exploiting the full range of DR with film.
Here an example which shows that capability very impressively. It is a shot by me, heavily underexposed by a former connection problem of the metering in the prism finder of my M645 to the body.
Please scroll down to the portrait of the young lady with the hat:
Hier ein Vergleich zwischen einem Scan mit einem Nikon Coolscan 9000ED und dem Heidelberg Tango Trommelscanner nach händischer Konversion. Die Schärfe im Scan mit dem Coolscan 9000ED ist sicher nicht optimal. Das Bild wurde ohne Glasbühne gescannt. Dieser Scanner kann das sicher besser...
www.fineartdrumscanning.de
The scan was made with a Heidelberg Tango drumscanner by my friend Sebastian Dziuba. I was totally surprised that he could "save" this underexposed picture. And it shows that there is far more detail on the reversal film and much more DR than expected. Much much more than you would expect if you only look at the official HD curve.
Depending on the film up to 18/19 stops:
The messages we hear on forums whenever film is mentioned is that ‘Film is Dead’, no amount of ‘no it just smells funny’ can get people to shut up about it.
www.onlandscape.co.uk
Depending on the film up to 14/16 stops.
Some in my opinion very important general statements about the topic Dynamic Range:
It probably is one of the most overrated topics in the sense of being a big problem in photography.
It isn't a big problem because of two facts:
1. For beautiful and very impressive pictures you don't need a high dynamic range at all. Do you know any famous picture which has become famous because of a high dynamic range?
No, because there isn't any picture.
And if your most important details - which tell the "story" of your picture - are placed in either the deep shadows or the high highlights, then you have made something fundamentally wrong with the Gestaltung (framing, design) of your picture.
There is really no reason to be so "obsessive" with high DR as it has become in recent years especially with the digital influencers.
2. If you are really in a situation in which the DR of the scene is bigger than the capability of your film or sensor, then there are lots of different methods available to manage the high contrast of the scene and adjust it successfully to the DR capabilities of your used capturing medium (film, sensor).
We have
- fill-in light (flash, reflectors, other additional light sources), which is one of the best methods by far, because you can measure for the highlights of the scene, and get all the wanted detail in the shadows by the fill-in light; even extremely high scene contrast can be managed that way. You are doing what photographers should do: "Painting with light" by using light.
- gradual ND filters
- pol filter
- exposure and development according to the Zone System (for BW negative film): N+ and N-.
- dodging and burning in print process
- diffuse pre-exposure / pre-flashing.
My experience in my workshops with the participants:
All have cared much to much about the DR of the "sensor", but much to less about all the above mentioned very effective contrast management options.
DR could only be a problem if you let it be that by ignoring the contrast management options.
Best regards,
Henning