R
ruben
Guest
Since I entered RFF I randomly heard about the need of a "ground glass" to check the lens sharpness at film plane, but I never happened to see one personally.
Therefore, whenever I needed to check lens at film plane I used instead an SLR focusing screen, after asking time and again at the forum if it should be ok.
Then the day came in which I needed to check a medium format camera, while the available medium format screens I had at the time were not big enough to sustain it on the film gate, so I found it approriately to ask what is a ground glass at all, and a friend even referred me to try a certain ground glass maker, which by the way proved to be a very nice man and a pro in his craft.
Today the famous ground glass arrived home, spotless work, low cost, usps shipment door to door. But meanwhile, and we are talking about some two to three months (the delay was on my guilt), I happened to buy a supplementary focusing screen made new for Rollei Tlrs - this one I intended to cut for a Mamiya Tlr, to serve as a focusing screen instead of checking the focus at the film plane
Btw, the flickr folks at the "twin lens reflex" there, and Rick Oleson first of all, warned me that not every screen could be used as a focusing screen for the Mamiya tlr since there is an isue of the thickness of the screen, making a focus difference, or error, unless it is according to the specifications.
Good to know, but the split image screen for Rollei happened to be already bought.
So I have now at home both the ground glass and the Rollei split image screen, which one of its sides is of the same length like the ground glass. This means I can use it as a ground glass since I can mount it to the film gate of the medium format camera I intended to measure.
Therefore, my simple question is what advantage has a simple ground glass screen to check focus at film plane over a focusing screen, which in my case is a split image focusing screen, making the work of checking the film plane much easier.
In principle, most focusing screens have different devices to fine focusing against none on the ground glass. Futhermore, a split image aide is held as the most accurate one - So why the talk is about the ground glass instead of focusing screens ?
Cheers,
Ruben
Therefore, whenever I needed to check lens at film plane I used instead an SLR focusing screen, after asking time and again at the forum if it should be ok.
Then the day came in which I needed to check a medium format camera, while the available medium format screens I had at the time were not big enough to sustain it on the film gate, so I found it approriately to ask what is a ground glass at all, and a friend even referred me to try a certain ground glass maker, which by the way proved to be a very nice man and a pro in his craft.
Today the famous ground glass arrived home, spotless work, low cost, usps shipment door to door. But meanwhile, and we are talking about some two to three months (the delay was on my guilt), I happened to buy a supplementary focusing screen made new for Rollei Tlrs - this one I intended to cut for a Mamiya Tlr, to serve as a focusing screen instead of checking the focus at the film plane
Btw, the flickr folks at the "twin lens reflex" there, and Rick Oleson first of all, warned me that not every screen could be used as a focusing screen for the Mamiya tlr since there is an isue of the thickness of the screen, making a focus difference, or error, unless it is according to the specifications.
Good to know, but the split image screen for Rollei happened to be already bought.
So I have now at home both the ground glass and the Rollei split image screen, which one of its sides is of the same length like the ground glass. This means I can use it as a ground glass since I can mount it to the film gate of the medium format camera I intended to measure.
Therefore, my simple question is what advantage has a simple ground glass screen to check focus at film plane over a focusing screen, which in my case is a split image focusing screen, making the work of checking the film plane much easier.
In principle, most focusing screens have different devices to fine focusing against none on the ground glass. Futhermore, a split image aide is held as the most accurate one - So why the talk is about the ground glass instead of focusing screens ?
Cheers,
Ruben
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