If the shutter tester has a single sensor (photodiode or phototransistor) then this has a size, a width. As the slot in the shutter passes this senor, after a certain portion has been uncovered the output will rise until the circuitry registers this as 'on'. As the trailing edge covers the sensor at some point it will register as 'off'. There is likely to be a difference between these two points
There's also hysteresis to account for...
We learned about this stuff as 'JND's':
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just-noticeable_difference (as dull as the article may be it's fascinating stuff huh)
Are you talking about seeing the result of a shutter difference in a print/neg or by looking/hearing the shutter itself ? Assuming the neg and everything else equal (i.e. a mental exercise) then, um, yeh no idea on the number - but yes, there is a number... Opinions will vary on its value, regardless of the fact that the number is best calculated as an average of actual empirical testing :wizard:
What type of shutter tester are you using?
Your shutter seems to work really good...
Most high end companies standards were 20% on slow speeds and 35% on high speeds.
... What does that translate into as fraction of F-stops? ...
Nick,
Steven,
If I understand the rest of your statement here correctly, I'm not sure these variables have a bearing on the outcome of the test I am performing. Though the differences from camera to camera and how they have determined their ratio of slot sizes and curtain travel is camera specific, the overall result should be the same when measuring the amount of time it takes for light to pass through that ratio and onto the tester sensor and/or film in milliseconds. In the end, a 1/4 of a second is a 1/4 of a second regardless of how the camera is set up, right?:confused:
Blanc,
And jumping the gun here a little does anyone care to let the reciprocity issues of film come into the equation ?
Remembering it is a factor with very small exposures as well as long ...
Yeh, don't get me mistaken - I'm talking completely in terms of mental wankery here - trying to determine where, how and when our thought experiment begins and ends ...
If all other things are going to be equal, we need to define 'not other'
Yes indeed, that's why I include the word 'almost'. Maybe I should have said 'sometimes almost'!
Another effect I noticed on my Speed Graphic shutter is that the gap between the shutter and film is so big that the slot 'image' has very fuzzy out of focus edges. Quite noticeable - a sort of penumbra, if you like. I suspect this could have the effect of giving the film a slight 'pre-flash' as the shutter transverses the film (and a post flash too, for that matter). Whether it has any real effect on the exposure or not I don't know - but I would have though that with a slow curtain speed and a fast film - it might well do!
Hmmmm. Interesting. Thing is though, because the spread is fuzzy and acts like a pre-flash, it doesn't just affect the exposure - it will surely affect the film gradation as well? I wonder if any Speed Graphic users (or any camera where you can use both leaf and FP shutters) have ever noticed a difference in gradation (better shadow detail) between the two shutters on the same lens and film?
I must try it myself some time.
I have a horrible feeling to be sure would involve... calculus :eek:. Let's not go there!.
No please, lets !
Perhaps just work with a couple of triangles and a rectangle for focal plane ?
But the integrals involved with leaf shutters ? hmmm
I don't know, but I don't like the idea of relying on two wrongs making a right.
But I think with the inherent shortcomings in certain shutter designs, there necessarily has to be a few wrongs, so maybe better to try to get them to cancel each other out?
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