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Diffraction limited pixels... Really?
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<blockquote data-quote="Stoshowicz" data-source="post: 363385" data-attributes="member: 31397"><p>Horoscope Fish </p><p>Assume Nikon standard daylight from above, maybe 5600 Kelvin. Im just trying to find out whatever is optimum using conventional standards and I know that in the field, I would always be <em>hovering around</em> that optimum configuration,, but Id at least be hovering around the actual optimum rather than a subjective and questionable 'trial and error fudged optimum'. </p><p>I'd have to actually give the methodology a try, before I said it wasn't useful to know the best settings for my lens.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stoshowicz, post: 363385, member: 31397"] Horoscope Fish Assume Nikon standard daylight from above, maybe 5600 Kelvin. Im just trying to find out whatever is optimum using conventional standards and I know that in the field, I would always be [I]hovering around[/I] that optimum configuration,, but Id at least be hovering around the actual optimum rather than a subjective and questionable 'trial and error fudged optimum'. I'd have to actually give the methodology a try, before I said it wasn't useful to know the best settings for my lens. [/QUOTE]
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Diffraction limited pixels... Really?
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