Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Ok, I goofed. The eyepiece in a pentaprism finder does indeed have a magnification of about 4-5x, however, the "magnification" does a comparison at a viewing distance of 25cm or so (I am afraid I forgot the exact figure. I will have to look it up.) In effect, because the eye would be much closer to than that to the focussing, so the effective rangefinder base length is only the focal length of the lens times 0.18 times 2. So the effective base length with a 50mm lens is about 18mm or so, hardly accurate enough for a fast lens. For my Nikon F3T camera, I maintain a collection of focussing screens for different purposes: the type E, a groundglass with a grid is what I use most often. For available light, I use G2 which is microprism throughout, though much coarser than SL. I occasionally use type R which is similar to type E, but with a split image prism in the middle. Nikon cautions that the prism on this screen looks at even narrower points, so it advises against using for a lens faster than f2.8. From: Frank Dernie <FrankDernie@compuserve.com> > Ken Iisaka wrote > > <The split prism screen is indeed rangefinder: the image you see in these > two > >halves are aerial images from different points of the lens. Typically, > the > >angle of the prisms are so that you see the image at the points at f5.6 or > >so, or 5 degrees or so off axis. This means that the split prism > >rangefinder has a base length of (focal length) x 0,18. With a 50mm lens, > >the base length is 9mm. Given that the viewfinder has a magnification of > >about 4x, the effective base length is 36mm. > > > I for one am fascinated. I knew that the prisms gave the rangefinder effect > of around 0,18 times focal length. Olympus and Nikon and probably others > made f4 focussing screens which increase accuracy to 0,2 x focal length, > OTOH I did not know that typical viewfinders have a magnification of 4. I > had always rather assumed that SLR split images were WAY less accurate than > a Leica. My SLR has a plain ground glass, I prefer it personally and > assumed it to be more accurate for the reasons mentioned. > > thanks for the info > Frank