Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/06/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]George, Steve, and the gang: You are quite right that this is a quick-and-dirty hand-held test, and *by itself* isn't scientifically or statistically valid "proof" of anything. However, it is consistent with some other tests I've run (for focus shift) with other lenses, when the camera *was* on a tripod. These were done with staggered cereal boxes and soup cans on the roof of my car. I never worked these up for posting, as they were just tests I'd done for myself to see how much my lenses focus shifted at various stops, and I did a couple of runs without a filter just for fun. I've also done such tests under florescent light, and there was not much difference at all with/without the filter. Which makes sense, as florescent lights put out a couple of narrow bands of blue and green, and little else. Taken all together, I feel confident that B&W shots I've just posted show an effect I've observed numerous times under more controlled conditions. And since I shoot wide open under tungsten light a lot, the results are quite valid for me. My practical-cat working conclusion is that the more IR reflective the subject is, the more IR light there is, and the wider the lens is, the more IR-smearing effect your're going to get. Based on that, I'm going to use the filters most of the time. Another interesting aspect to all this: Some might prefer the look of the shot without the IR filter. It reminds me a bit of old-fashioned thick emulsion film with heighened red sensitivity, developed in D-23. If you like that look, here's a way to get something like it digitally. --Peter George wrote: > Peter's test shows us what this lens will do wide open, hand held, by > Peter, at a 360th of a second, with and without a filter. > Locking the camera down on a solid tripod, stopping down to where the > IR wave lengths will also be in focus "may" very well provide a > different result. All of us with M8's could spend time testing our > various lenses, with and without filters, at various apertures, > focused on various subjects, with various amounts of IR present. > When discussing sharpness and contrast camera movement and subject > movement must be absolutely removed from the equation (as much as is > humanly possible). > Peter's test, while interesting and informative, certainly did not > reduce camera and subject movement to anywhere near zero.