Making test prints at different apertures at the same exposure is not that hard!
Anyway, the magnifier test is much quicker and tells the same story. And yes, it might not matter if you can't see it in the print, but I thought the exercise was to determine which is the best aperture? Then again, you might see the difference at another enlarging scale. In my opinion, it's good to know which is the best aperture, and then make a judgement, case by case, if the difference matters.
Well Tom, I've tried it and found it rather tough to match a print at, let's say f/2.8 and 5s with another at f/16 and theoretical 160s. And of course four more prints in between. It's not impossible but it's very time consuming and unnecessary, but maybe I'm too picky. Anyway, the magnifier test is much quicker and tells the same story. And yes, it might not matter if you can't see it in the print, but I thought the exercise was to determine which is the best aperture? Then again, you might see the difference at another enlarging scale. In my opinion, it's good to know which is the best aperture, and then make a judgement, case by case, if the difference matters.
Fair enough. I have to admit my intrest only goes as far as the effect on my prints. If I cannot see a difference between f5.6 and f11 using my 80mm f4 Rodagon, then I am happy using my lens anywhere in this range. Even if you cannot get a 100% identical print as far as the densitometer reading says, if it looks as near as dammit (i.e. you cannot see a difference really), I doubt it will have a huge effect on the perception of sharpness. I am happy to leave my investigations there and am a bit perplexed why anyone would want to go further rather than just print more good prints!
I have 2 very good lenses to use with 35mm..a 50mm ApoRodagon, a 63mm N 2.8 El Nikkor. Both lensesd offer a more contrasty image at 5.6 than 4.0, both lenses have superior corner sharpness at 5.6. These effects are visible in the prints.
This is with using double glass carriers on a Dirst S45 which is free of alignment problems.
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I have to choose whether I spend my (limited) darkroom time testing or making prints, and (personally) I'd rather make prints.
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I rather test and then make good prints.
But maybe that's what you meant.
Too much testing is as bad as not enough testing, because the result is the same... not enough good prints.
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