On 15/12/06, J. C. O'Connell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The diffraction limits of optical lenses are
> independent of focal length and absolute aperture.
> Diffraction limits are inversely proportional to
> f-ratio (f-stop) and the approx formula is 1500/f-ratio
> in line pairs /mm. This means at f6.3 lens would have
> to first resolve ~240 lp/mm to be considered diffraction
> limited and that would be quite an impressive lens
> indeed. Most lenses dont reach true diffraction limited
> resolution performance until f11 or smaller. e.g.
> they are WORSE than the diffraction limit as f11 or wider.
> I dont think you are going to find any 14mm lenses
> for 35mm FF or even APS that are truly reaching diffraction
> limited performance across entire format ( as good as phyics will allow
> ) at
> an f-stop as wide as F6.3. Aint going to happen on such a wide
> angle lens, even on APS where its not as wide as 35mm.

Sometimes you make a great deal of sense John. This be one of those times. ;-)

-- 
Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.swiftdsl.com.au/~distudio//publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998

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