Yes, I know that - however, JCO and others did not differentiate between RF
lenses and SLR lenses.  They made blanket statements.  My comment was
intended to show that there are enough variables that a blanket statement
is foolish.

Shel



> [Original Message]
> From: Adam Maas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
> Date: 11/14/2006 11:21:18 AM
> Subject: Re: Using a Super Tak w/ istDS- A challange to the list?
>
> Shel,
>
> I'll note that focusing with SLR's and RF's is quite different. RF's 
> lose focusing accuracy with longer/faster lenses (Where this happens 
> depends on the effective RF baseline length) while SLR's lose focusing 
> accuracy with slow/wide lenses. Experience with focusing a Leica M lens 
> does not cross over to focusing a SLR lens.
>
> -Adam
>
>
>
> Shel Belinkoff wrote:
> > John,
> > 
> > There was no "original contention."  What started all this was my
comment
> > that I found the ST 105/2.8 easy to focus when stopped down to f8.0 when
> > used with the istDS.  It was just a simple comment reporting my personal
> > experience with a specific lens on a particular camera, and my pleasure
in
> > finding how nice and easy it was to use an old screw mount on the
istDS. 
> > No contention that this experience is/was transferable to other people,
> > cameras, lenses, situations.  Later I tried the 35mm/3.5, and found it
> > about as easy to focus.  Just another comment reporting my experience,
with
> > that lens, on the same camera.  I guess my ignorance of the laws of
physics
> > and the science of focusing must have skewed my experience.  I just
didn't
> > know that longer lenses are easier to focus.  Had I known that, perhaps
my
> > experience would have been colored by that knowledge, and I'd have found
> > the 105mm easier to focus than the 35mm ;-))
> > 
> > Neither Bill nor I contended that our experience would be true for other
> > lenses, other situations, other cameras, nor were we trying to refute
the
> > laws of physics.  However, JCO, and now Mr Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA,
> > claim that longer lenses are always easier to focus, although Mr
Papenfuss
> > at least has the good sense to add a rather long list of qualifiers to
his
> > argument. 
> > 
> > Never did I think that this thread would get so contentious, and that it
> > would run for so long.  And now Mr. Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA has
joined
> > the fray and gotten things going again.  All the scientific evidence and
> > book learnin' in the world cannot change the experience Bill and I had,
> > regardless of what the laws of physics says.  Of course, Mr. Papenfuss
was
> > careful to qualify the heck out of his comment, which is as it should
be,
> > because there are numerous variables in the real world, which,
> > unfortunately for some people, is where we have to live, work (and
> > photograph) these days.
> > 
> > Now, were we to try the test in a lab, eliminate all variables, use
> > scientific measuring tools, remove the human element, it may be that the
> > 105mm lens could be proven to focus easier or more accurately than a
35mm
> > lens.  
> > 
> > It's also interesting to note that some fast, long lenses are
notoriously
> > difficult to focus well or quickly, and that wider lenses are easier to
> > focus.  A case can be made using the Leica M75/1.4 or the Leica M
90/2.8. 
> > For many people both lenses require a lot of practice to focus
accurately,
> > and focusing a 28mm lens is much easier for many, if not most, Leica M
> > users.  So, where does that fall into this "discussion."  Oh, wait, no
one
> > said anything about rangefinder lenses ... they are the exception to the
> > laws of physics and scientific testing and discourse. 
> > 
> > Shel (a man of no letters)
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> >>[Original Message]
> >>From: John Francis 
> > 
> > 
> >>>   Everything else being equal (aperture, contrast, resolution, 
> >>>helical gear cut, etc), a longer focal length (e.g. 105mm) will have a 
> >>>higher "focusing sensitivity" than a wide angle (e.g. 35mm).  That's
> > 
> > just 
> > 
> >>>plain physics.  
> >>
> >>But that still doesn't necessarily make them easier to focus, which
> >>I believe was the original contention.  In fact in at least one way
> >>it makes them harder to focus - it's too easy to overshoot, or to
> >>focus on the wrong place (especially if you are trying to pre-focus
> >>in anticipation of a moving object coming into your composition).
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
>
>
>
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