Martin Rickards
Member
Say between a 100 mm lens for 35 mm and a 100 mm for medium format? What gives one the coverage for medium format while another only covers a 35 mm frame? Just curious.
Even closer for rangefinders. The 35mm Jupiter 12 on my Kiev has a bulbous rear element that looks like it will hit the shutter blinds every time I fit the lens. It does hit some Contax fit rangefinder shutters and the clearance on the Kiev is tiny. Retrofocus Olympus compacts work on the same principle. OTOH the Taylor Hobson lens on my 5 x 4 can be feet away from the film plane with an extending bellows.On a 35mm SLR the rearmost element is typically just forward of the mirror, maybe 1.5" or so.
Yep.Even closer for rangefinders. The 35mm Jupiter 12 on my Kiev has a bulbous rear element that looks like it will hit the shutter blinds every time I fit the lens. It does hit some Contax fit rangefinder shutters and the clearance on the Kiev is tiny. Retrofocus Olympus compacts work on the same principle. OTOH the Taylor Hobson lens on my 5 x 4 can be feet away from the film plane with an extending bellows.
the difference is only in the image circle it creates;the MF lens needs to cover a larger negative.You could overlay the two images and they would match.Say between a 100 mm lens for 35 mm and a 100 mm for medium format? What gives one the coverage for medium format while another only covers a 35 mm frame? Just curious.
But why does the mf lens create a larger image circle? what is the theory behind it?the difference is only in the image circle it creates;the MF lens needs to cover a larger negative.You could overlay the two images and they would match.
If the angle that the lens projects toward the film is 60 degrees wide the further you are from the film the more coverage there is. 60 is relatively normal.But why does the mf lens create a larger image circle? what is the theory behind it?
Sorry, but that is incorrect by definition.In simple terms, 100mm is the focal length, ie how far in front of the film is the lens when the image is focused (this is very simplistic, in practice this is true for telephotos...
as somebody already said;that's in the design of the lens and the intended use of it.But why does the mf lens create a larger image circle? what is the theory behind it?
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