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davidb
13-Jul-2007, 12:33
I am wondering if I will see a difference between the Rodenstock Rodagon APO 90mm f4 lens when compared to the Schneider Componon S 80mm f4 lens that I have.

Prints would be 11x14 to 16x20.

thanks.

Henry Ambrose
13-Jul-2007, 14:22
I don't know about the APO Rodagon but the 90 Schneider HM is spectacular. It covers 6x7.

bob carnie
13-Jul-2007, 15:39
David
this is absolutely my favorite medium format enlarging lens, I think it is an amazing piece of glass.
It beats the hell out of all my 80mm Apo's.
the coverage is wonderful.

Bob


I am wondering if I will see a difference between the Rodenstock Rodagon APO 90mm f4 lens when compared to the Schneider Componon S 80mm f4 lens that I have.

Prints would be 11x14 to 16x20.

thanks.

Bob Salomon
13-Jul-2007, 16:32
Yes you will see a difference. Providing you are comparing the 90mm Apo Rodagon N vs any other 90mm. But if you are comparing the old 90mm Apo Rodagon you probably would not see a difference.

To see what a lens can do you must be enlarging within the optimization range, use a glass carrier and have a properly aligned enlarger.

davidb
13-Jul-2007, 16:35
I am not sure how old the APO 90mm is but it has the red ring around it.

Bob Salomon
14-Jul-2007, 05:38
I am not sure how old the APO 90mm is but it has the red ring around it.

David,

If it is old it is a 90mm APO.

If it is not old it is a 90mm Apo Rodagon-N.

That is the way the lenses are marked on the barrel.

The N is much less common then the non N version. There were no "in between models" The 90mm N is a totally different lens optically and physically.

The replacement for the old 90mm Apo non-N is the 80mm Apo Rodagon N. It covers 67 wide open. The old 90mm had to be stopped down to cover a full, large size 67 (there are several different actual 67 sizes that vary depending on the camera or back you use). Additionally all Apo N lenses are multicoated,