David H. Bebbington
Member
David, I crawl in the dust before you since youre able to detect the shutter induced vibration through the mirror induced vibration when firing the P67.
Soeren, as I have made clear several times on this thread, my experience of Pentax 67 is limited to using a borrowed example for a relatively short time quite a few years ago, and I certainly never had time to do a lab test.
My remarks were based on the Reichmann website, in particular this part:
QUOTE< Here's another example. With a 300mm lens and 1.4X extender, a shutter speed of 1/10th of a second, and with the camera mounted on a light weight Gitzo 1228 carbon fiber hiking tripod with an Acratech ball head, there is so much shutter-induced vibration that the shot is blurred. This is shown in the frame below and its accompanying enlargement. Please note that this photograph was taken with the mirror locked up and with the use of a cable release! The sharpness destroying vibration is from the large focal plane shutter. A light weight tripod just doesn't cut it with this camera.
By way of explanation, what's happened here is that the shutter has bounced, as all shutters do. So, there have effectively been two exposures. One during the opening of the shutter and the second during the closing, at which point the camera had essentially rung like a bell thus causing the second image.>UNQUOTE
The picture accompanying this text has a double image, both parts of which are of equal intensity and which must therefore have been caused by exposures of roughly equal length. Reichmann talks about shutter bounce, which as far as I am concerned happens only with leaf shutters at high speeds when they open and close correctly and then open again.
Based ONLY on this pictorial evidence (let's be clear, this was obtained with the mirror locked up) and my general experience with many different types of camera, I conclude that this double image was caused by a vibration which was set off when the shutter was released and which lasted around half of the total exposure time (if the shutter had really bounced, which I have never heard of with a focal-plane shutter, the result would have been a normal single image with extra density in a band at one end where the shutter had bounced and the shutter slit had moved back out part-way over the film).
My conclusion about shutter vibration is based on this and this alone - I really cannot imagine any other cause. Purely from an engineering point of view, it is very hard to make a large fp shutter which can approach the vibration level of a leaf shutter, since all the moving parts of a leaf shutter are symmetrical, which means theoretically that any vibration should be self-cancelling. Furthermore, adding a leaf-shutter lens to a camera like a Pentax 67 will give greatly enhanced flash-sync capability but won't cut vibration unless it is possible to close the leaf shutter, fire the fp shutter on T, wait for vibration to die down and then take the picture with the leaf shutter only.
In general, it appears that the vibration characteristics of the Pentax 67 have improved over the years - as I understand it, the original model had no mirror lock-up, this feature was then added, and then a Mark II eventually appeared. If somebody with extensive hands-on experience of Pentax 67 is telling me they get sharp pictures, I of course believe them without question - if on the other hand, I see evidence such as that on the Michael Reichmann site, my explanation is as stated above. I hope it is clear that this is all I am saying!
Regards,
David