I am a darkroom beginner and have an old Meopta Opemus 5 from around 1980. It came with an EL Nikkor 50 and I picked up a Schneider componon-s 80mm for my 120 negs. Both work quite well.Bob Carnie said:For my $ spent in lenses I would agree with Peter
Apo Rodagon 150 -is a really beautiful lens
Apo Rodagon 90 - I prefer this lens over the 80apo - maybe more coverage
Apo Rodagon 50 - beautiful lens to work with
As Les stated if you can test the lenses under your working set-up it is of great advantage.
I am not sure if Rodagon makes an apo 300, I do like the rodagon360
GlennSYD said:. . . My question is: For these *recommended* lenses, like the APO Rodagon's, how serious and well configured must your enlarger be to see a real difference?
OK Ralph, thanks for the warning. Will start to investigate these new lens options seriously.....rbarker said:I would, however, recommend removing your shoes. No sense in ruining a good pair when your socks get blown off by the new prints.![]()
Tom - while I'd agree that, by definition, APO designs are highly corrected for color convergence, it seems to me that B&W prints would benefit as much as color. The only difference being that color fringing that might be apparent in a color print would become grey fringing in a B&W print. But, as noted, my experience was limited to switching from an older 50mm Componon to the new 40mm APO Compnon HM. The difference in sharpness and local contrast with negs that I had previously printed with the old lens was quite striking - rather like moving from a Holga to a Hassy.tomishakishi2 said:I am not at all convinced that the difference between a decent Componon S/ Rodagon and their new APO variants would be that great if at all noticeable at in Mono. . . .
I'm with you. Based on experience with over 50 EL-lenses that accumulated in my darkroom over the past 15 years, I can say:tomishakishi2 said:I am not at all convinced that the difference between a decent Componon S/ Rodagon and their new APO variants would be that great if at all noticeable at in Mono. I am especially suspicious for the larger film formats or at any neg size if the enlarged image is a relatively small enlargement factor (as the resolution on print may still be greater than you can actually see).
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