Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/04/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]From: LRZeitlin@aol.com wrote: >Six megapixel cameras which will probably provide almost the imaging capabilities of 35mm film will be available in the comsumer market before years' end. Nine megapixel cameras, which will equal 35mm capabilites, should soon follow. When I scan a 35mm Leica slide in my HP PhotoSmart scanner (not exactly a state-of-the-art device), I get a 1500 x 1200 pixel image. Now in theory that's a 1.8 megapixel image, but as Jim Brick told us in posting last year: "It takes 4 pixels in the camera, to record one image pixel. The stated resolution of consumer digital cameras must be divided by four to get the "real" resolution." (That makes sense - the little Fuji digital camera I bought last spring to record the arrival and growing up of our new puppy is a 640 x 480 model, but the images it produces are very soft when displayed at that size.) So taking Jim's rule, to rival the results I get from a scanned slide will need a 7.2 megapixel camera. But that's using a cheap scanner. The results from a good-quality scanner will require even more megapixels. A 9 megapixel array may the the equal of film for the general consumer, but digital technology will still have some way to go to rival film. Thinking back to the quality of the images which Jim Lager projected using the latest Leica projector when lecturing to the Leica Historica last spring, I'd hate to think how many megapixels it would take to produce that kind of image sharpness. (Perhaps someone like Jum Brick can provide us with an estimate. For the consumer market, I'd expect to see digital capturing about 50% of the business by around 2005, and being dominant by around 2010. But given that one of the driving forces which led to the development of apo lenses was the weakness of traditional lenses when large final images are required, I suspect that film will be the only medium to match apo lens performance for at least another decade in the professional market. Nor is resolution the only factor we should consider. What is the virtual "speed" of today's digital arrays? Also there is the time lag of getting the image off the array and into storage - when will digital arrays match the frame rate of a film camera with a motor drive? For those of us who use "Barnack" Leicas and the lenses of yesteryear, the conversion to digital may come sooner. Given the level of Japanese interest in the Leica, I'd expect that once the technology for 10+ megapixel arrays becomes established and relatively inexpensive, we'll see Japanese companies offering drop-in digital replacements for film which can be used in screw and M models of Leica, and in classic Nikon and Canon cameras. Regards, Doug Richardson