i suppose, it's digital sensor that equalizes all the lenses. they all
give the resolution (lpmm) numbers, computed from your description and
the pictures, around 52 lpmm, except 55mm tak that goes a bit higher.
the only real difference is in contrast.

btw, on the USAF chart, at the same 4..5' distance, my $150 
rolleicord scores 69 lpmm. on provia100, which is not exactly 
the highest-res film.

very interesting results. thanks!

best,
mishka

On Apr 3, 2005 5:44 PM, Fred Widall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Since lots of people are testing lenses at present I thought I'd join
> in - hope you don't mind. Besides its a really crappy day here with
> lots of snow and high winds, so what else is there to do.
> 
> I pinned up a print out of the USAF target to my wall (approx four feet
> from the camera), mounted my *istDS on a sturdy tripod, mounted a variety of
> lenses all set to F8 on the camera, fired the camera in RAW mode with 2
> second delay (i.e. mirror up). Opened the images in PSCS, cropped out the
> center section of the target, converted to JPG and loaded them to this
> page.
> 
> http://www.ist.uwaterloo.ca/~fwwidall/LensTest/index.html
> 
> The lenses I chose for this highly scientific and precise testing were
> 
> 1) DA18-55mm F3.5-5.6 (@50mm)
> 2) F70-210mm F4.5-5.6 (@70mm from 6 feet)
> 3) FA28-90mm F3.6-5.6 (@50mm)
> 4) M 50mm F1.7
> 5) S-M-C Takumar 35mm F3.5 (with K adapter mounted on Sakar 1.7x
>    converter)
> 6) SMC Takumar 55mm F2 (with K adapter)
> 
> For what its worth to my aging eyes the ranking is
> 
> 6,4,1,5,3,2
> 
> Nothing too surprising in that the prime lenses seem to be better, even
> the one on the Sakar teleconverter.
> 
> If the weather improves tomorrow I may try repeating the tests but use
> a more distant target.
> 
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>  Fred Widall,
>  URL: http://www.ist.uwaterloo.ca/~fwwidall
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
>

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