Paterson v Peak
Setting aside for the moment the fact that the Peak focuses into the corners which the Paterson doesn't, is there any difference between a print that was "Paterson focused" and one that has been "Peak focused". If so,does this difference manifest itself at all enlargements or is there a minimum size beyond which it begins to show?. For a scientific answer I suppose this question really has to be addressed to those who have both models and may have used both to produce two identical prints from the same neg.
Thanks
pentaxuser
Pentaxuser raises a good question - a very good question.
I now own both.
I started with the Paterson, which was fine for 35mm & 6x6 - I could see the grain easily on 35mm enlargements and just about on 6x6.
However, I then moved up to 5x4
Grain on a 5x4 Neg was way beyond the Patersons capabilities - well with my eyes anyway.
Following advice from a thread I posted on APUG requesting advice, I then started to use the Paterson to focus on details (twigs/leaves/edges/anything) when using the 5x4.
However, as been stated before, the Paterson only works in the middle bits of a print.
If my details on the 5x4 were outside the operating area of the Paterson - I was stuffed
Hence the move to the Peak, not only can I see into the corners of the print but I can now once again see the grain - even on a 5x4 - yeah!
So, in answer to Pentaxusers question, are you going to get sharper focused (better) prints from a Peak than a Paterson, then the answer is probably not.
If you are using a Paterson and it works for you then getting a Peak won't offer you any advantage,
I bought a brand new metal Peak from Robert White and it cost me about £150 (but I fully intend to be fumbling in the dark for this thing for at least the next 30 years

)
It is easy to use, has a very bright image plus its rigidity and weight give it a very nice tactile quality that cannot be easily quantified.
But, and it is a major BUT, it only focuses the negative on the paper.
If I was a professional printer I would buy one without hesitation but as an enthusiastic amateur I would only buy one out of necessity
Martin