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Camera | Magnifys: | Camera | Magnifys: |
Canon A-1 | 0.96x | Nikon F5 | 0.75x |
Canon AE-1 | 0.86x | Nikon FA | 0.82x |
Canon EOS 1N | 0.75x | Nikon FE2 | 0.87x |
Canon EOS A2E | 0.76x | Nikon FE | 0.88x |
Canon EOS Elan 2 | 0.72x | Nikon FG | 0.89x |
Canon EOS Rebel SX | 0.72x | Nikon FM2 | 0.87x |
Canon T50 | 0.84x | Nikon FM | 0.89x |
Canon T70 | 0.87x | Nikon N70 | 0.77x |
Chinon CP-5 | 0.94x | Nikon N90 | 0.77x |
Contax 137 | 0.88x | Olympus IS-3 | 0.76x |
Contax 139 | 0.89x | Olympus OM-2s | 0.89x |
Contax RTSII | 0.85x | Olympus OM-4 | 0.75x |
Contax RTS III | 0.75x | Pentax A3000 | 0.90x |
Konica FS-1 | 0.69x | Pentax K1000 | 0.91x |
Konica TC | 0.90x | Pentax LX | 0.86x |
Konica TC-X | 0.87x | Pentax ME | 0.98x |
Leica R3 | 0.85x | Pentax PZ-1 | 0.86x |
Leica R8 | 0.76x | Pentax ZX-5 | 0.78x |
Leica R4 | 0.87x | Ricoh KR-5 | 0.95x |
Minolta Maxxum | 0.86x | Ricoh XR-2 | 0.91x |
Minolta Maxxum 9xi | 0.76x | Ricoh XR-7 | 0.87x |
Minolta Maxxum 700si | 0.79x | Ricoh XR-P | 0.86x |
Minolta X-700 | 0.87x | Rolleiflex SL2000F | 0.84x |
Minolta XD-11 | 0.89x | Sigma SA-300 | 0.70x |
Nikon F4s | 0.70x | Sigma SA-1 | 0.82x |
Nikon EL2 | 0.85x | Yashica FR | 0.84x |
Nikon F3 | 0.78x | Yashica FR-1 | 0.87x |
Discussion:
The above table of viewfinder magnifications highlights several points.
First, 35mm SLR viewfinders make the viewed scene appear smaller than it
is (magnifications below 1.00). Second, older viewfinders generally had
larger magnification factors. By contrast, many medium format viewfinders
such as prisms and chimney magnifiers have factors closer to 3X or even
5X!
Some early SLRs had magnifications of exactly 1.00 by careful design. You
could look through the viewfinder with one eye and see the rest of the
scene with the other eye (if more dimly). This trick allowed you to see
the scene "normally", in stereo vision, with the SLR framing superimposed
on the scene, at least with a bit of practice. You could also anticipate
items entering the image from the sides or top of the scene. By contrast,
I lost a few Christmas parade shots this week because people walked into
the shot from the side just as I was pressing the shutter. My "one-eyed"
view and viewfinder area limited to the image on film didn't provide any
warning. By comparison with most SLRs, rangefinders usually have and
display an area around the edges of the frame, if only as part of the
parallax correction effort. So you can see or anticipate people or objects
moving into or out of the shot with these old tricks. How many shots have
you lost with your new SLR because somebody walked into the edges
of the shot without warning?
Today's high eye relief viewfinders, started with the Nikon F3HP finder
series in 1982, are handy if you must use glasses with your
camera. The problem is that the chosen way to achieve such high eye relief
is to reduce finder magnification factors. After all, if you are
looking into the finder from farther away behind the eyepiece, you need
less magnification if you are to avoid vignetting the image.
Do you really need to use a high eyepoint relief viewfinder? Can you
correct your astigmatism problem with a custom ground lens from your
optometrist? Or can you simply order a modest cost diopter correction
(usual ranges -5 to +5 diopters in some lines)? Glasses also may make it
harder to exclude extraneous light, such as a low cost rubber eyepiece
eyecup could provide with greater contrast for a very modest cost. Side
reflections and glare can also be a new problem.
Strangely, 35mm SLR viewfinders have gotten worse rather than
better in some areas. Partly, the smaller magnification factors of newer
cameras are the result of an attempt to reduce the size of the pentaprisms
required on the cameras, lowering cost and weight of the cameras. The
older cameras had heavier pentaprisms, but they provided higher
magnification ratios too.
Some of the newer economy cameras use penta-mirror designs rather than a
solid glass pentaprism. The cost of a pentamirror system is a good bit
less, and more importantly the rather heavy solid glass prism is replaced
by thin front surface mirrors and air spaces. The problem is that you lose
circa 2% up of the light at each of the reflecting mirror surfaces. The
total losses of a pentamirror design make the resulting prism view
somewhat darker than an equivalent but heavier and more costly pentaprism
design. How much heavier? Would you believe up to ten times heavier,
per tests by David Phung (Ibid., p.90)!
Older cameras had very high contrast ground glass screens, rather than the
low contrast but high brightness screens found on most of today's autofocus cameras. This change makes the newer
cameras seem a lot brighter, but they are also harder to focus accurately
than the older high contrast screens.
A partial solution to the older darker ground glass screens is to install
one of the newer brighter laser etched screens. An optimized grid pattern
of scoring of the screen provides higher and brighter amounts of light to
reach the eye. In some cases, simply replacing the screen in your 35mm SLR
can raise the screen brightness by the equivalent of a full stop or more.
That is a lot cheaper (circa $100 US) than buying one stop faster lenses
for a brighter focusing image!
Image Edge Cutoff in Finders
Before leaving this topic, we might note that the actual size of what you
see in the finder has also shrunk on many modern cameras. In the
past, many finders with their larger prisms were designed to give you a
view of most of the film image - up to nearly 100% in some pro models
(e.g., circa 97-98% with Nikon F..). But in many modern 35mm SLRs, you
will not only see a smaller magnification factor image (see table above),
but much of the edges of the image on film will NOT be shown on the
camera. For example, many cameras opt to show only 22mm x 32mm of the full
24.2mm x 36.2mm film area. That design tradeoff yields a view of only 82%
of the image that will actually be on the film in the viewfinder. Again,
this trick helps reduce the size, cost, and weight of the pentaprism
needed to provide the image.
Some folks will argue that this trimming process is useful since those
edges will not show up in the slides shown on screen. The slide mounts
will cover up some part of the edge of the slide, after all. So reducing
what you see in the viewfinder to what you will see on the slide is a way
to avoid cutoff in your slide shows. Sounds reasonable, but how many folks
shoot slides anymore? After all, only 4%
of consumer film sales are for non-color print emulsions, including
both slides and black and white). For darkroom work, not being able to see
in the viewfinder what will be in the edges of your film is less
understandable.
Many of us want to use as much of the limited area of 35mm film as we can
by cropping closely in the camera. If your viewfinder doesn't show the
full film frame as it will appear on the film, then you can't crop as
tightly. That is why pro photographers may opt for the more expensive pro
models (Nikon F.., Canon F1..) which show closer to 100% of the on-film
image in the viewscreen. Paradoxically, this full frame feature is
more critical when shooting slides. You can't just crop in the
darkroom when making a print. Unmounted slide film is required by many
buyers who want to examine the full image with a loupe, particularly in
the larger film formats (6x6cm, 6x7cm..).
So not being able to see what is in those edges when composing your shot
in the viewfinder is a potential problem. You may find all sorts of
intrusions such as wires or branches which intrude into the edge of your
slide, ruining the shot. What if you elect to use your slide duplicator to
"fix" and copy the slide? You introduce losses in quality (a second
generation copy) and light and film color shifts too.
This problem is one good reason for having two cameras with you, besides
the obvious benefits of camera backups. The pro
camera with its nearly 100% film image could be used with slide film for
critical shots. A backup lightweight prosumer or consumer 35mm SLR camera
could be used with either slide film or print film (including black and
white), depending on your shooting needs and goals. You can also opt to
have more slide film loaded and ready (and avoid running out at a critical
moment), along with two or more zoom or fixed lenses. With many of these
backup cameras costing less than a fifth the price of the top of the line
models, this flexibility costs very little.
Viewfinder Cutoff Test
How can you test to see what you are missing in your viewfinder? The
simplest way is to take a ruler with a millimeter scale and a closeup or
macro lens. Now simply carefully align a few end-of-roll sample shots of
the ruler, both horizontally and vertically, noting the limits you see in
the viewfinder. Get the film developed, and look at the film - not the
prints. Now see how much if the ruler is shown on the film, in
millimeters, versus what you aligned and saw in the viewfinder. The result
can be pretty surprising. The worst cases may cut off as much as 1/4 of
the film area in the viewfinder, although these models are mostly from the
former U.S.S.R. production designs.
A related test you can now do is to see how conservative your lab printers
really are. Most lab printers decide to "compensate" for the cutoff in the
viewfinders, and prevent surprises like wires and branches around the
periphery of most photos. So they setup their printers to only print the
center 80% to 90% or so of the image area. The really bad minilab printers
in our area even slightly defocus your sharp lens images. They do this so
as to hide the scratches and hairs and other gunk that would otherwise
show up from their sloppy setups. So shop around!
If you really want your entire print, you will probably have to either do
it yourself, or pay pro processing rates to get full frame
printing.
How does this relate to vision issues in photography? Maybe it isn't you,
maybe it is your minilab printers. If your images are out of focus on the
prints, pull out a loupe and check the film. The
film could easily be sharp, and your lab minions just messed up the
printing and threw it out of focus to cover their own errors. Time to
change labs!
Date: Sat, 02 Dec 2000
From: Jeff Cook [email protected]
Newsgroups: rec.photo.equipment.35mm
Subject: Re: 90% Viewfinder - What to do?
"Q.G. de Bakker" wrote:
> Why? Because all that matters is that what you need to be on film is indeed > on film. Any extra is just that, an extra. And what you see in a less than > 100% viewfinder is indeed ending up on film, isn't it?
If you have a reason to compose for a full frame, then this extra
distance does have impact on the choices you would have had for
perspective. If your viewfinder is even 90%, you would end up moving
back farther for the framing. Moving back farther changes the wide angle
appearance the subject; therefore, you are losing a portion of what you
might have had the option to use.
And then of course, there's the increased grain when you make the same
print you would if you had moved closer to fill the true frame. How much
difference in grain? I dunno. How much more trouble do you go through to
buy & use low grain films?
Any viewfinder that's not 100%...sucks. And yes, all my cameras suck.
--
Jeff Cook
[email protected]
http://www.cookstudios.com
Washington DC area
Date: Thu, 18 Jul 2002 From: Eric Rudd [email protected] Newsgroups: sci.optics Subject: Re: Magnification in SLR viewfinder? AES wrote: > I'm trying to understand a statement concerning a certain SLR camera that > says if it's used with a 70 mm lens the magnification in the viewfinder > will therefore be unity > > Question: Is this some standard way in which SLRs are designed? Or is > it just a property of the viewfinder optics in this particular camera? The magnification one gets in the viewfinder of an SLR camera is the focal length (FL) of the taking lens divided by the focal length of the viewfinder eyepiece. For a 35-mm camera, the viewfinder eyepiece FL is typically a bit shorter than 70mm -- 50 to 60 mm is more common. I don't know if there's any standard for this, but there are constraints: the light from the viewfinder screen must travel through a penta roof prism, in order to be bent back horizontally and produce an image that is erect and correct left to right. (The shape of the prism is responsible for the oddly-shaped bulge on the top of SLR cameras.) The dimensions of this prism must be large enough to accept light from the entire 36x24 mm screen, so there are lower limits to its size, and therefore also the optical path length. A simple doublet is usually used for the eyepiece, which must be placed away from the screen by approximately its focal length, so this places a lower limit on the focal length of the viewfinder eyepiece. The upper limit on the focal length of the viewfinder eyepiece is imposed by the desire not to have too small an image to look at, and the desire to minimize the weight, bulk, and expense of the prism and camera. There are also medium-format SLR cameras, where all these dimensions must be scaled up correspondingly, and there are special viewfinder attachments that act like telescopes, to magnify the view of the central region of the focusing screen. -Eric Rudd [email protected]
From camera makers mailing list: Date: Tue, 20 May 2003 From: Samuel Tang [email protected] To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Cameramakers] Source for accessory shoe/cold shoe? Hi John, John Stafford wrote: > Jonathan King at [email protected] wrote: > > > The subject says it all. > > > > I'm building a 6x12 pinhole/zoneplate camera and am looking for a metal > > accessory shoe/ cold shoe that I could put on the camera for a finder or > > level. Other that stripping an old camera that has one just attached, > > and not built into the body, is there a source for these things? > > If you can build an optical finder for a 6x12, then sign me up. But a frame > finder will almost certainly suffice. Frame finders aren't crude. They can > be quite accurate. Levels? You can buy flatbottomed levels from many > sources. That obviates the need for a shoe. Cement it to the camera body or > countersink it into the body. One of the cardboard "Film-In" cameras Konica used to produce had a 17mm panoramic lens, and its viewfinder is suitable for 6X18 with a 90mm lens. I think you can strip the finder assembly and use that with suitable modifications. I used to get shoes and other parts from the service department of a camera manufacturer, perhaps a camera repairer with lots of parts cameras would be able to sell you one for a very modest sum. Best, Sam.