Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/06/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>When I had the honor to accompany Mr. Schulze during Photokina 1994, where he >visited both the Leica and the Zeiss booth, the people there were not at all >giving the expression that Mr. Schulze's test scheme is not good. In fact >Leica has asked him several times to test their entire lens range for them. Giving the status these tests have in Germany it would be foolish for the marketing people NOT to assign publicity value to these reports, even when factually incorrect. >BAS does not use a TV screen instead of an optical instrument, this is >rubbish. The BAS Pro test works - in brief - as follows. A highly defined >slide (made by Zeiss, about 20.000$ worth) is being projected by the lens to >a large screen. At that screen a high definition CCD camera analyzes certain >areas of this projection, a computer compares the projected grid with the >ideal grid. Maybe my description of a TV screen is not accurate enough. A projection screen however is a screen and has therefore a certain granularity. Analysing this projected image (which is nothing more than the same slit (0,03mm!) the Pop Photo guys use in their equally expensive lab setup) through a CCD camera (which certainly is a Videocamera!) introduces more image degrading noise. This setup is quite often used for quality control in all optic firms. It is also well known not to be a true equivalent of a real optic analysis. > >The only people I know which are talking bad on BAS test results are the >Normtest guys - they are the competition of BAS. The Norm test persons from Color Foto (indeed the competitor of FotoMagazin) are right in their insistance that the MTF measurements of 5, 10, 20 and 40 lp/mm are far superior to the crude circle of diffusion measurements and CCD translation method of BAS. In an interview in Color Foto (12/95) Lothar Kolsch, Manager of the Optics department at Leica has stated that the 5-40 lp/mm criterium is the best available at the moment. People from Rodenstock and Zeiss are of the same opnion. > >It is my strong belief that there is not much sense in lens tests, when most >lenese can be regarded as "very good". And my last remark: If you do not >trust his results, you cannot trust any test results. So you have to find out >if you think that the lens you are using meets your requirements. And if you >personally think, that the lens you are using is the best in the world - it's >okay with me. Everybody is free to believe what he/she wants. The MTF test with its 5-40lp/mm (or for that matter the BAS slit analysis (which after all is an electronic equivalent of the age-old acutance test) fail to analyse important aspects of a lens (its colour transmission, its corner fall-off, its distortion, its distribution of resolution and contrast over the entire field, reflections, flare reduction etc). All the BAS test does is comparing the the measurement of an edge gradient curve of an 0,03mm slit with its theroretical form. And that at one point of the lens. Neglected is also the quality difference at several distances (close-up, 1 meter, 5 meters 50 meters, and at infinity). In my testing I weigh all these factors in the endresult. So for instance I analyse 15 points in a negative from center to corner at at least three different distances. So I have been able to show that some lenses are not gradually detoriating from center to corner, but that you can see distinct 'bands' of alternating better and less good definition. The eternal longing of people to have one number to qualify a product (or a person) is fundamnetally misguided. Who wants his or hers complex personality have reduced to a number measured along a one dimensional scale. Why then use this one dimensional measurement paradigm onto a lens, which also exhibits many characteristics of a strong personality. Sorry for being so long winded. Erwin Puts