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Thanks---my 1/2 brain did a search after I asked the question!Many threads on this already with examples.
Roughly f/4 but f/2.8 isnt far off. 5.6 is ok but quality degrades after it.
Easy test to do yourself.
Many threads on this already with examples.
Roughly f/4 but f/2.8 isnt far off. 5.6 is ok but quality degrades after it.
Easy test to do yourself.
Hope it is accurate.
I am surprised. It has been a long time since I researched such things and it was for film/digital full frame 35mm lenses but I always assumed lens induced issues were minimized at f8. Guess that is no longer the case! Good info, Hope it is accurate.
Paul
Strictly pixel peeping I found the sharpest is wide open 2.8. It is nearly as good up to about 4.5. You need to add ND filters or shorten the shutter time quite a bit.
You need to add ND filters or shorten the shutter time quite a bit.
I am surprised. It has been a long time since I researched such things and it was for film/digital full frame 35mm lenses but I always assumed lens induced issues were minimized at f8. Guess that is no longer the case! Good info, Hope it is accurate.
Paul
I come from the film days and had the same notion as you.5.6-8 was often the sweet spot.Digital lenses are much sharper out of necessity.I have an Olympus M4/3 camera and a 2.8 lens is best at about F/4I am surprised. It has been a long time since I researched such things and it was for film/digital full frame 35mm lenses but I always assumed lens induced issues were minimized at f8. Guess that is no longer the case! Good info, Hope it is accurate.
Paul
Boy is that ever true in South Texas even in October. I thought for sure an ND16 would be my go to filter but I found even with that the highlights were blown out in small areas. So now at least in bright sunshine, the ND32 is the one I will use most of the time because it can get me in that aperture sweet spot and still hold the shutter speed.
ND16 Clip 4k Dlog Graded
ND32 Clip 4k Dlog Graded
KB
Some issues there. Lots of (D)SLR lenses were generally sharpest 1-2 stops down from full open. As most lenses were f/4-f/5.6 thats where this came from.
As well as that the M2P has a tiny sensor with a high pixel density - the drop of sharpness over f/5.6 and in particular big decline from f/8 and narrower is due to light diffraction and is rooted in basic physics so the lens really isnt doing anything here as it cant.
In other news, people get hugely overly fixated with the 180 shutter "rule" when in reality for most types of video a significantly higher shutter speed still wont be visible in the shot.
Just to test my memory, I checked the specs on a few 35mm lenses I own, these are for shooting full frame 35mm sensor / film. The specs I came about showed that the sharpest, edge to edge for my lenses ( I suppose with the exception of the drone ) were a half stop open from f8.I come from the film days and had the same notion as you.5.6-8 was often the sweet spot.Digital lenses are much sharper out of necessity.I have an Olympus M4/3 camera and a 2.8 lens is best at about F/4
I’ll throw in my 2 cents for F4 as well. I generally fly with whichever ND will allow me to shoot from EV-0 to EV +1.5 (overexposing for Log) at F2.8- F4. If an aperture ABOVE F4 is needed to get those exposures I’ll land and switch out the ND but I do feel comfortable going below them.
Assuming you are OK with both F2.8 and F4.0, you can get away with fewer ND filters on the M2P which is really nice. If you buy a ND4 and ND16 you also effectively have an ND8 and ND32 just by stopping down from F2.8 to F4.0 respectively. And those 4 filters (or their equivalents via aperture change) is probably all most people need.
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