I'm resurrecting this thread to generate interest again. I've read all the posts here and and on other camera forums and also participated in telescope forums. I think I may have stumbled onto solutions to the problems listed in this thread, like the coma problem and why the .5 focal reducer wasn't 2x wider, fingers crossed. My Focal reducer arrived today and will be testing some things in the coming days. I am working the next two days and then heading to the South Dakota film festival for the weekend. I will try to squeeze my tests in before I leave, but if not I will be starting early next week at the latest.
@Brian202020 Nice! This is what the GH3 will need if the crap factor is greater than the GH2.
Personally, I don´t think optical adjustment is the way to go if you want a wider FOV. And the assumption that the image gets brighter by a wider focal length is just plain wrong..
If anything, this would be the time to resurrect projection adapters for those who want to counter the 2x horizontal crop factor of the bmd and the gh3.
@Brian202020 I'm curious to here your ideas :-)
@RRRR Its not like a shorter focal length, its more like compressing the FF image onto the smaler sensor - and that would make the image brighter (I got that as one of the expected results of my test).
@psycho: Very true. That was how Zeiss managed to make their F0.7 lens, by using a focal reducer.
There seems to be some confusion...
With the focal reducer added, the new lens system that that you just created absolutely does have a shorter focal length, and also a smaller image circle. The angle of view does not change. Focal length alone does not determine a lens's angle of view.
The angle of view the sensor captures does change with a focal reducer - it changes a 50mm lens that is like a 100mm lens on m4/3 sensor, back to its original full frame FoV when used on m4/3. And that would be awesome ;-)
I was talking about the lens's angle of view. A lens's angle of view is a property of the lens, independent of what camera it is attached to. A focal reducer generally won't change a lens's angle of view.
Please don't talk about angles of view in millimeters. That's the original source of this confusion. Angles are expressed in degrees.
The only characteristic of a lens is its focal length expressed in millimeters. The angle of view depends on the sensor/film size. You can have an ultra wide 50mm lens, just use it with a 20cm x 20cm photographic plate (you would need a lens with a big enough image circle so).
Thats why we all refere to a 50mm lens with a full frame sensor in mind - it wouldn't make any sense otherwise.
Here is a quick update on my findings. I had to order more parts, so most of my testing has gotten delayed until they arrive. Here is what I believe I figured out from what I've seen with my limited testing so far. I believe I found out why @Psyco wasn't getting a full 2x image size, and if has to do with the distance between the back of the lens and the focal reducer. When I get my new parts I can verify this with images. As for the coma issue, it still looks present. once I get the new parts and can verify the 2x image increase, I might either buy a separate coma corrector and put it inline with the focal reducer or just buy a more expensive focal reducer with built in coma correction. These are expensive and I'm not willing to pull the plug on that unless I have a pretty good idea everything else works correctly.
Anyway my goal is to come up with a list of things to buy and where to buy them to make a M4/3 to Nikon F or Canon EF adapter with a built in focal reducer that works. I'll keep you all posted.
While this would be great on the gh2, it would be amazing on the BMC.
Lots of interesting and good thinking in this thread. The back of the lens is more critical in the optical path than the front of the lens. It is even difficult to make a good quality tele converter and this problem is magnified when trying to create a wide converter at that end. If it is difficult to produce a good quality wide converter for the front of the lens, it would be more so at the back of the lens.
This must be the reason good quality optical adapters for adapting lenses of different flange distances are rare. Canon produced one years ago to fit FD lenses to EOS flange distance, but even they chose to make it a tele converting adapter and not the other way around.
Psyco, I encourage you to go study the Wikipedia articles on focal length, image circle, field of view, angle of view, and also f-number while you're at it, because you stated the incorrect definition of f-number in another topic. I think you have an intuitive sense of what's going on, but you're using the wrong terms and expressions.
Forget the sensor for a moment. Hold the back of a lens up to a wall with a bright light in front of the lens, so that you can see the entire image projected by the lens on the wall. The image is a circle, and it's showing the lens's entire field of view. A lens has a field of view, independent of any sensor. If you do this with a 50-mm lens for a big view camera, the view is wide. If you do it with a 50-mm lens for a 35-mm photographic camera, it's a normal view. If you do it with a 50-mm lens for a 1/3-inch CCTV camera, it's a telephoto view. The lens's focal length is one property of a lens, and not the property that describes its angle of view. Angle of view is another property of a lens, and it can be expressed in degrees. The diameter of the image circle is another property, expressed in millimeters.
Adding a focal reducer creates a new lens system with a shorter focal length and a narrower image circle. Adding a focal reducer does not change a lens's angle of view.
Finally, when considering the effect of a sensor, if the sensor is not as wide as the image circle, then the angle of view of the camera system (sensor plus lens) will be narrower than of the lens itself.
@RRRR "Personally, I don´t think optical adjustment is the way to go if you want a wider FOV. And the assumption that the image gets brighter by a wider focal length is just plain wrong.."
Focal length itself does not change brightness, but changing the magnification or size of the image circle does. If you took a lens farther away from the film thus creating a macro adapter, the focal length remains unchanged while magnification and image circle increases. The image is enlarged and becomes dimmer. This same would work the other way around and that is what the focal reducer would achieve.
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