Mailinglist Archives:
Infrared
Panorama
Photo-3D
Tech-3D
Sell-3D
MF3D
|
|
Notice |
This mailinglist archive is frozen since May 2001, i.e. it will stay online but will not be updated.
|
|
Nishika Camera Modification
- From: P3D <vidi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Nishika Camera Modification
- Date: Wed, 22 Oct 1997 23:39:21 -0500 (CDT)
I am contemplating making a modification to a Nishika 3-D
Camera, which was given to me, to use as a stereomacro camera.
I would like anyone interested here to verify some things
I've measured and calculated.
Given (from Camera Spec. Sheet): Focal Length = 34mm
Measured f No.: f/15 and f/22 (2.26mm and 1.57mm Dia. apertures)
Measured Lens Spacing: 18.5mm Center-to-Center
Given the lens to film distance (s) is probably 34mm, I need
to determine the focal length of a supplimentary lens to add in
front of each camera lens to make an object at 2.5 feet (762mm)
focus again at this "s" of 34mm. So, if S=762mm and s=34mm, we get
a required focal length of 32.55mm. To change the 34mm lens to
an effective focal length of 32.55, I figure I need a 538mm lens
(500mm closest choice) about 10mm away from the 34mm lens and
this will give me the the s of 34mm that I can't change and allows
me to focus on an object which is about 2.5 feet away.
Now, given this, I figure I can use three different pairs of
the Nishika lenses to capture fairly accurate macro images.
If I use lenses 1 and 3, I get a lens spacing of 37mm which I
figure is just right for an object at 2.5 feet with infinity
in the background. I can use lenses 1 and 2 for objcts as
close as 18 inches (if the depth of field of the lens at
f/22 will let me), and use lenses 1 and 4 for an object as
far as 4 feet away.
Does this all seem right to you? Can anyone tell me if I'll
ever see the focus I want at the 18" and 48" distances? And the
final question, how do you figure these will look in the half
frame format of the Nishika? I'm used to viewing full frame
from my slidebar 35mm camera(s). Am I going to be dissapointed
once I go through all this trouble and view the images for the
first time and say "oh...., well that didn't work". I've taken
quite a few macro images with my Micro-Nikkor and they really
look great. But I think part of the effect is the impact of the
full frame filling my field of view. Any thoughts.
Thanks,
John Vala
------------------------------
End of PHOTO-3D Digest 2373
***************************
***************************
Trouble? Send e-mail to
wier@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe select one of the following,
place it in the BODY of a message and send it to:
listserv@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
unsubscribe photo-3d
unsubscribe sell-3d
unsubscribe overland-trails
unsubscribe icom
***************************
|