shimokita
白黒
... there would be no reason to divide the spherical figure in half...
Thanks for the correction Rob, my misunderstanding of the formula.
Casey
Timmyjoe
Veteran
Here's how it's worked for me for decades now. I shoot Leica rangefinders, and Nikon & Canon SLR's (older ones). I was told years ago that all the cameras I shoot have a "From the factory" optic of -1.
I need to +1 the optics for my vision (so I need to make the optic "0").
With Leica, their diopters are marked by the optical change, so a +1 is a +1 diopter and when I put a +1 diopter on my Leica, the optic is then "0".
With Nikon and Canon, their diopters are marked for the final optic with the diopter attached. So a "0" diopter in Canon or Nikon adds +1 to the factory optic (-1) and brings the final optic to "0".
What I have found is a Leica +1 diopter is optically the same as a Canon or Nikon "0" diopter. I know this because I have all three, and they are all optically the same.
Hope that helps.
Best,
-Tim
I need to +1 the optics for my vision (so I need to make the optic "0").
With Leica, their diopters are marked by the optical change, so a +1 is a +1 diopter and when I put a +1 diopter on my Leica, the optic is then "0".
With Nikon and Canon, their diopters are marked for the final optic with the diopter attached. So a "0" diopter in Canon or Nikon adds +1 to the factory optic (-1) and brings the final optic to "0".
What I have found is a Leica +1 diopter is optically the same as a Canon or Nikon "0" diopter. I know this because I have all three, and they are all optically the same.
Hope that helps.
Best,
-Tim
john_s
Well-known
Actually, the best we can do is to have an optician grind a lens specifically to your prescription. One would have to take care to see that it is rotated correctly to the prescribed cylinder axis.
Obviously ideal, but with a rectangular format camera, when turning the camera 90 degrees to go from landscape to portrait you would be worse off. There was a self-rotating eyepiece device advertised a few years ago which would have solved the problem.
An argument for square format.
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
Here's how it's worked for me for decades now. I shoot Leica rangefinders, and Nikon & Canon SLR's (older ones). I was told years ago that all the cameras I shoot have a "From the factory" optic of -1.
I need to +1 the optics for my vision (so I need to make the optic "0").
With Leica, their diopters are marked by the optical change, so a +1 is a +1 diopter and when I put a +1 diopter on my Leica, the optic is then "0".
With Nikon and Canon, their diopters are marked for the final optic with the diopter attached. So a "0" diopter in Canon or Nikon adds +1 to the factory optic (-1) and brings the final optic to "0".
What I have found is a Leica +1 diopter is optically the same as a Canon or Nikon "0" diopter. I know this because I have all three, and they are all optically the same.
Hope that helps.
Best,
-Tim
I believe this is exactly correct.
Rob-F
Likes Leicas
Obviously ideal, but with a rectangular format camera, when turning the camera 90 degrees to go from landscape to portrait you would be worse off. There was a self-rotating eyepiece device advertised a few years ago which would have solved the problem.
An argument for square format.
Oh, yes, I had not thought about that. Best to go with the 1/2 cylinder correction, then.
shimokita
白黒
Oh, yes, I had not thought about that. Best to go with the 1/2 cylinder correction, then.
Hahaha... does that mean Post #8 is back in play ... just kidding
My prescription is cylinder -0.5 and sphere -1.75
[edit: revised calculation] diopter = 1/2 x (cylinder + sphere)
my prescription calls for a -1.125 adjustment
which according to the chart (Post #8) is a -2 Nikon marked lens
... and that's the Nikon Diopter that works for me
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