Switch to English Language Passer en langue française Omschakelen naar Nederlandse Taal Wechseln Sie zu deutschen Sprache Passa alla lingua italiana
Members: 55,961   Posts: 1,148,911   Online: 1017
      
+ Reply to Thread
Page 5 of 6 FirstFirst 123456 LastLast
Results 41 to 50 of 59
  1. #41
    2F/2F's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Los Angeles, CA
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    7,999
    Images
    4
    "This doesn't work, 2F.

    "1. Assuming that people are wrong put you in this strange mess.
    2. Do you indeed first ask? Considering 1. why?


    "Yes indeed you did change the meaning of your statement!
    Hoping to make it sound more correct, i presume. (I only presume, not assume, that people are incorrect )"

    1. There is no strange mess...except the one that follows you around these forums. You are a knowledgeable and helpful person, and I appreciate you being here...really! A lot! ...but things tend to get really useless really fast when you start going back and forth with someone.

    FWIW, my assumption that I stated is, "I do assume this." It was in response to your statement, "But we mustn't assume that people use terms incorrectly." Therefore, I stated nothing but I assume that people use terms incorrectly. I did not say EVERYBODY or ALL THE TIME.

    Would it not make sense to ask what people mean, knowing that people use terms incorrectly?

    ...and yes, it is to assume: to suppose to be the case, without proof. I have not polled the world scientifically...just collected experience and used it to make assumptions about future experiences.

    People, especially students, but all sorts of people, really, tend to be unclear on technical terminology. I know this, and I do not assume that they are correct when they use a term. That can be a shoot-ruining disservice in some cases. I assume that most of them use terms incorrectly, at first. An assumption is simply an assumption. It is not a be all and end all, to be taken with great weight. It just prepares one to deal with certain situations and approach them a certain way. It does not mean that things will always go the way of your assumption...not at all!! Being wrong in an assumption does not bother me. The point of having an assumption is not to be "right" all the time. The assumption is there for good reason, whether it is strengthened or not in a particular situation. As you get to know certain folks, you know when to be more wary that they don't really know what they are saying, and when when to be more confident that they mean what they say. Until proven otherwise by experience with an individual, I will assume that he/she needs to be asked for clarity in a situation like the following:

    2. I ask upon being asked something like, "I am supposed to use a smaller f stop, right?" This could mean one of two things. I ask things like, do you mean a smaller aperture, or a larger aperture? More light or less light? More depth of field of less depth of field?

    I do not ask before, because where does it end? Do you have to quiz someone on his/her use of terminology before they may ask you a question in the studio or the darkroom? What about 20 or 30 someones? That is what lecture period is for. To learn that stuff. Lab is to reinforce it through practice...which I help to do...but not by repeating an entire lecture when a student has limited tie in studio or with an enlarger.

    As for why I ask, it is to find out what they meant by their statement...so I know what they meant. Just because I assume that people use incorrect terminology does not mean that everyone does...it just means that they can.

    My points in this all: Lots of people use incorrect terminology. 1. We should be aware that this is the case, and 2. We should strive to be extra clear with terminology in accident-prone situation (operating a camera), especially with those whose level of accurate terminology use is unknown or little known.

    That is all...and it got blown into picking nits...because we both have time and are stubborn, I guess.

    I really do not appreciate the misquote, even in jest. It's point is also incorrect, IMO. I rarely change everything in an edit, and I certainly did not in this thread.

    So, good evening.
    Last edited by 2F/2F; 03-11-2010 at 08:49 PM.
    2F/2F

    "Truth and love are my law and worship. Form and conscience are my manifestation and guide. Nature and peace are my shelter and companions. Order is my attitude. Beauty and perfection are my attack."

    - Rob Tyner (1944 - 1991)

  2. #42

    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Netherlands
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    5,662
    Quote Originally Posted by 2F/2F View Post
    1. There is no strange mess...
    The strange mess, 2F, is the one in which a post, after it has received a reply, doesn't say what it did before anymore.

    The thing to do, 2F, is to deal with replies to posts by posting a further post.

    The thing not to do, 2F, is to deal with a reply by altering the original post.

  3. #43
    RalphLambrecht's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    USA, UK and Germany
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    4,698
    Images
    1
    Quote Originally Posted by Q.G. View Post
    Yes.

    And because people building shutters aren't stupid, they allow for that. The shutterspeed isn't measured form the time the shutter is fully open until it is not.
    They can't allow for small apertures (they could, but neither you nor i would want to pay for such a shutter), and thats why - like i said - you always (!) get overexposure, never underexposure.
    So even in textbooks explanations of why you get overexposure, that is correct.
    Overexposure with small apertures, and underexposure wide open. It's all relative and depends on the aperture chosen to set the nominal shutter speed.

  4. #44
    holmburgers's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Lawrence, KS
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    3,783
    Images
    2

    Wait a tick

    This discussion has devolved....... but it's been mighty interesting!

    For what it's worth, I originally said "small aperture". I never mentioned f-stops, and therefore I'm not sure where any confusion could arise. The word aperture means "opening, slit, gap....", and therefore by saying small aperture, I meant just that.

    What seems funny to me is the obvious fact that even f16 isn't a LARGER number; it's a fraction! 16 is the denominator, therefore it's a smaller number than f1!

    No one goes around saying that a McDonald's quarter-pounder is bigger than a two-thirds pound thickburger from Hardee's (or Carl's Jr, depending on where you're from ) because the denominator is bigger!

    Have we forgotten the fundamentals here??

  5. #45
    holmburgers's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Lawrence, KS
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    3,783
    Images
    2
    Oh, and by the way, why don't we keep personal tiffs between members hidden away in private messages. It looks bad for APUG & it's annoying to everyone else who isn't involved.

    In other words, take it outside.

  6. #46
    RalphLambrecht's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    USA, UK and Germany
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    4,698
    Images
    1
    Quote Originally Posted by holmburgers View Post
    ...No one goes around saying that a McDonald's quarter-pounder is bigger than a two-thirds pound thickburger from Hardee's (or Carl's Jr, depending on where you're from ) because the denominator is bigger!

    Have we forgotten the fundamentals here??
    Perfect example! I must remember that one. The other one I heard was, Should I hit you over the head with a 1/2-inch or a 1/4-inch pipe?

    It's indeed the denominator. That's why I prefer writing it f/stop and f/16, for example, to show that the aperture is the focal length divided by 16.

  7. #47

    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Montgomery, Il/USA
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    3,979
    Oh poo!
    Stopping up is what happens to a drain.
    You don't commit vomit to a page, it's verbal diarrhea.
    You can test a leaf shutter with no optics inserted & get an accurate result. Keep in mind though that ANSI/ISO tolerance is 25% at moderate to long speeds and 50% at high speeds 500 & greater.
    A motorcyclist is the only one who understands why a dog rides with it's head out the window.
    "I had an idea once, it died of loneliness"--George

  8. #48
    declark's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    So. Cal
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    214
    Images
    72
    Interesting thread so far. I just acquired a couple of Hasselblad lenses and am new to the system. I figured I'd try a lame attempt to test the shutter speeds, well at least the slow ones using a p&s digicam in video mode which records at 30 fps. I hold the camera to the back and fire the shutter while recording at 1s.... thru 1/30 figuring the slow shutter speeds are most likely to be off due to being gummy or worn springs etc. I review the video on the digicam and count frames in slow motion playback to see how close the speeds are. Not that this pertains a whole lot to this thread.... but during my search for info on the subject I found an article where a person used a DSLR and it's histogram function to check accuracy, which is much more sophisticated than my approach and might answer the OP's original question rather easily - see link:http://photo.net/large-format-photography-forum/00Uajj

  9. #49

    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Oregon and Austria
    Shooter
    4x5 Format
    Posts
    388
    If shutter opening/closing time is 2-3 milliseconds as mentioned above, the maximum error, when converted to shutter speeds, is somewhere between 1/500th and 1/320th of a second. This could be converted to a fraction of the exposure you are using and then added to the exposure. Example: my taking aperture is f8 and I'm using 1/125 sec. 1/125 + 1/500 (2ms) = 4/500 + 1/500 = 5/500 =1/100 or, about a third stop more exposure. Using max error, the difference would still be less than 1/2 stop.

    If you really want to get picky, you could simply open 1/3-1/2 stop when using your widest apertures to compensate. However, your tested shutter speeds are likely made at full aperture and, therefore, you are more likely to be overexposing things taken at your fastest speeds, assuming you are calculating for the actual shutter speed when using faster than 1/60 (higher speeds on clockwork shutters are rarely as fast as indicated and have a tendency to overexpose anyway if you don't compensate...). In that case, you might want to close down a third of a stop at your fastest speeds, that is, if you use 1/125-1/500 regularly (I sure don't).

    Or, assuming your shutter is consistently withing 10% or so (likely not), you can just have your shutter testing done at the aperture you use most (for most of us, somewhere around f22-32) and then calculate exposure using the actual shutter speeds rounded to the nearest 1/3 stop (way accurate enough).

    Or, you can use neutral density filters to get your shutter speed longer, where there is much less error.

    Or... you can just ignore the relatively small error, especially if you are shooting B&W, since it is well within "normal operating parameters" and won't have a practical effect on your final product. When in doubt, err on the side of overexposure a bit. Your metering, shutter inconsistencies, changing light, different film batches, how long you wait before you develop, etc., etc. will all have more effect than adjusting exposure for the difference in illumination due to shutter opening time at different apertures...

    Best,

    Doremus Scudder
    www.DoremusScudder.com

  10. #50
    Bill Burk's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Shooter
    4x5 Format
    Posts
    611
    Images
    11
    Stumbled upon an interesting article slightly relevant to the topic...

    Might need new graph due to different scan rates

    http://www.popsci.com/archive-viewer...AAAMBAJ&pg=106

    Dec 1967 pg 106 Smart way to check your camera shutter: Use your TV
    ...Shutter-calibration table...TV Lines - Exposure Time



 

APUG PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR INFRASTRUCTURE:


 
                     

Contact Us  |  Support Us!  |  Advertise  |  Site Terms  |  Archive  —   Search  |  Mobile Device Access  |  RSS  |  Facebook  |  Linkedin