wiltw
Subscriber
What you say is true, but then from a practical standpointThank you all for great responses!
I do understand most of this, and I get that the f/stop number is related to the area/geometric property and has a log(2) relationship.
I guess what I'm getting out of this is as follows:
Full f/stop values go in the sequence: f/1.0 f/1.4, f/2, f2.8. This scale is standard because it begins at 1.
However my lens *clicks* at f/1.8, f/2.8, f4 ... and so on. This means that the difference between the first and second click is in excess of one f/stop
This means that if I go from the first to the second *click* I'm closing the aperture slightly more than a stop, and slowing the shutter by one stop will not result in the exact same exposure, so the rule of clicking the aperture and shutter in opposite directions but keeping exposure identical is not a correct assumption between the first two clicks on my lens because they are more than a stop. (Though probably not enough to get upset about)
- often the engraved f/stop is not the true f/stop, as magazine tests from decades past prove
- unless you are shooting color transparency, variances in exposure are masked by enlarging and test prints made to determine right number of seconds of enlarger light
- we may see variances in the accuracy of shutter speeds, which add to or compensate for variances in f/stop
- an OM f/2 lens was truly f/2.06
- an OM f/2.8 lens was truly f/2.73
- an OM f/3.5 lens was truly f/3.29
- two samples were really f/1.86
- one sample was really f/1.87
"Polishing a turd" comes to mind.
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