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Thread: half/third stops found in lenses.

  1. #1

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    half/third stops found in lenses.

    I have a 135 rodenstock 4.5 on my super graphic right now. The lens only stops down to F32, and the slowest shutter speed before bulb is 1/2sec. In addition, it only operates in full stops which makes exposing things precisely very hard. I was just wondering if this is only common with older/less professional type lenses. I'll probably be spending some money on a nikkor 135 or 150 in the future and I was wondering if any of these modern lenses have more exposure increments (I have never examined a LF lens other than mine, so I don't really have a clue).

  2. #2

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    I believe that all shutters are graduated in full stops. However many (all?) modern shutters have third stop marks for aperture, and while these are not marked it would be easy enough to figure where the half/third stops would fall on a shutter such as that for your rodenstock.

  3. #3

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    I rarely feel the need to be exceptionally precise in exposure (what's a half-stop matter, after all, in any media except transparency)... but the greatest amount of adjustability is always going to be with the aperture. Unlike shutter speed settings, no matter how aperture is marked (whole, half, or thirds) one can always estimate and set in between the markings.

  4. #4

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    It depends on the shutter used, not the lens. Late model Prontors have 1/3 stop detents, it is a nice feature. The most popular shutters - Copals - have no detents. But you can open and close the aperture to whatever you want.

  5. #5

    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    current copal shutters come with 1/3rd stop detents or no detents depending on which you order. Obviously the no detents version can be set however accurately you can judge the positioning but to a 1/5th or even a 1/10stop is easily doable if you can see the markings and arrow.

  6. #6

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    1/3 stop makes a significant difference when you're shooting transparencies, although I wouldn't bracket negative film that closely... more like 1/2 or 2/3 of a stop for bracket outdoors, normal subjects.

    Actually I don't bracket negative film unless it is something extreme, like shooting very high key subjects with backlighting maybe?

  7. #7

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    I guess I should have specified that i've been shooting a lot of slide film, so half stops too help, especially when the bellows is extended and it tells me i need to compensate 1.7 stops of something silly like that.

  8. #8

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    ...wouldn't bracket negative film that closely... more like 1/2 or 2/3 of a stop for bracket outdoors...

    Frank, I know you didn't intend to send me down Memory Lane with that statement, but thanks for doing so anyway! My first serious photographic work and training came at the hands of a couple of old press photographers, the kind who had grown up with a Speed Graphic and a pocket full of Edison threaded flashbulbs. I've never forgotten one of the things Mac tried to impress on me as gospel: "A stop is the smallest exposure change that makes any difference." We know better, but when I put myself into his shoes and experiences, it makes perfect sense. In his press days, he needed to get a negative that could make a glossy print which would eventually end up as a halftone image on a sheet of newsprint. Indeed, if one exposure wasn't good, the next full stop away would do just fine...

  9. #9

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    Allan... I know who Edison is (was), but who is "Mac?"

  10. #10

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    Re: half/third stops found in lenses.

    yeah well even now, when you do a long nighttime exposure and you really can't afford to wait for a Polaroid because of changing conditions, sometimes you just have to do wild, what-the-hell brackets, a stop or more at a time, but that is pretty rare.

    But for 4x5 photojournalism I can perfectly understand why it would be business as usual.

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