Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
I just shot my first 20 sheets with my 65mm Nikon Nikkor lens and the results are somewhat disappointing. I expected this lens to be tack sharp but my slides tell a different story. I used f22 and f32 apertures, took my time in focusing, but I can't get everything tack sharp. Even when I look on the GG, the outer rim is blurry - is this normal for these extreme wide angle lenses.
The widest lens I had used so far was a Rodenstock 6.8 90mm lens and I never had this problem before.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
The 65mms with which I'm familiar from Rodenstock, Nikon, and Schneider all have an image circle of 170mm, which is just barely more than needed to cover 4x5 with almost no room for movements. So even without any movements the edges of the image are pretty much at the outer limits of the image circle where most lenses aren't at their best. Still, if you weren't using any movements I would have thought you could get a sharp image. Have you examined the lens for physical defects, e.g. separation of the elements, fungus, that kind of thing? Were you using any movements when you made the photographs? I don't know how valid comparisons are between lenses used with digital and film but FWIW I use a Nikon 17-35mm lens on my Nikon D100 and it's tack sharp.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
Brian, I think you hit the nail on the head. Looking at the GG it looks blurred at the edges - all around and I think it is a matter of the image circle. I used the lens on my Canham DLC45 with the regular bellows and there is no room for movements, but I can focus the lens on infinity. I guess what that means is cropping the image when priniting to eliminate the edge. I bought the lens at Midwest Photo Exchange and there is nothing wrong with it that I can see - the glass is perfect. Do other 65mm users (no matter what brand) have that same experience? Just curious.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
Juergen, I avoided the 65mm Nikkor for that very reason. On the other hand, I have a Nikkor SW 75mm f/4.5 that performs wonderfully. I use it extensively for shooting interiors of homes and it has always delivered great results. You may want to consider the extra 10mm in focal length as a reasonable trade for the performance.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
I have an older Schneider Super-Angulon 65/8 with an image circle rated even smaller than the Nikkor. The lens has a lot of light fall-off so I use it with print film and I adjust the gradient in photoshop, but it is quite sharp out to the edge of the frame. I'm happy with the lens.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
F32 and even F22 is way into difraction limits for a 65. Try one at F11 on something flat and see if it is sharp without difraction as an issue.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
I have doubts about the hyothesis that unsharpness that Juergen is experiencing is due to diffraction. It sounds like he is content with the sharpness at the center but not at the edges. Softness from diffraction from stopping down too far would effect the entire image.
I haven't used a 65 mm lens, but I wouldn't be surprised if the ground glass image wide-open didn't hold up well to examination with a loupe. The coverage wide-open might not be 4x5. Nikon doesn't seem to publish MTF curves for their LF lenses -- for MTF curves for a comparable lens, look at http://www.schneideroptics.com/photo...ulon_56_65.pdf -- at f5.6, the MTF curves fall off pretty steeply off-axis. Schneider gives the image circle wide-open as only 135 mm diameter. Of course, this isn't the Nikon that was asked about, but the techology is similar and the Schneider data gives a feel for the expected performance.
When I had a Canham DLC, I found wide-angle lenses difficult to use. This was before a bag bellows was available. Applying any rise would cause the front standard to tilt. I suggest carefully checking the parallelism of the standards, whether or not rise is used.
Also, did you remove the small screw on the back of the shutter? If left, this screw will cause the shutter to be tilted on the lensboard.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
http://www.europe-nikon.com/specifications.aspx?countryid=20&languageid=22&prodId=516&catId=148
Wide open 110mm.
Nikon Nikkor 65mm SW, f:4 - Sharpness
Thank You all for your responses. I also doubt that this is a difraction issue, but I will do more tests with the lens. I will shoot another badge of film in various "staged" set-ups and see how the lens performs. The image circle for the lens is indeed 110 fully open and 170 at f22. That would explain the blurriness on the GG when viewing wide open. I will report back with my test results.
Juergen