• adding an aperature stop to a fixed lens

    From Steve@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 27 10:15:31 2020
    This may sound like a strange question, but is it possible to add an external aperture stop to a fixed lens to increase it's depth of field? If so, how would
    you do it?

    The reason for this question is I have a very old Imacon Precision II film scanner. I want to scan mounted slides with it, but when they made this scanner, they used an 8W high CRI fluorescent tube and had to get a fast lens because the light source was limited. This resulted in a shallow depth of field, and you can't get good edge-edge sharpness with a mounted slide (because of the curvature of the film).

    I can make a new light source using high CRI LEDs, and stop down the lens, but I'm not sure how to do it so the lens sharpness isn't reduced.

    Thanks in advance.

    Steve

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  • From Phil Hobbs@21:1/5 to Steve on Mon Jan 27 19:47:45 2020
    On 2020-01-27 10:15, Steve wrote:
    This may sound like a strange question, but is it possible to add an external aperture stop to a fixed lens to increase it's depth of field? If so, how would
    you do it?

    The reason for this question is I have a very old Imacon Precision II film scanner. I want to scan mounted slides with it, but when they made this scanner, they used an 8W high CRI fluorescent tube and had to get a fast lens because the light source was limited. This resulted in a shallow depth of field, and you can't get good edge-edge sharpness with a mounted slide (because
    of the curvature of the film).

    I can make a new light source using high CRI LEDs, and stop down the lens, but
    I'm not sure how to do it so the lens sharpness isn't reduced.

    Thanks in advance.

    Steve


    Once the aperture gets small enough that diffraction is important,
    there's a tradeoff between DOF and resolution. On the plus side, you
    win DOF quadratically as you relax the resolution.

    1970s-era Kodak slide projectors cheat by matching the field curvature
    of the projection lens to the average shape of a free-mounted slide.
    (Fairly brilliant actually.) European projectors such as Leitz and
    Rollei expected you to use glass-mounted slides, and so had a flat field.

    So if you have only a few slides to scan, you could remount the slides.
    There's some danger of spoiling them, of course, and you have to worry
    about Newton's rings from the multiple reflections.

    Aperture stops need to go at the pupil of the lens. Some lenses have
    pupils outside the outer glass surfaces, but most don't, so this is
    probably pretty hard.

    On the other hand, it might be worth experimenting with an iris
    diaphragm right against side of the lens with the longer conjugate and
    see if there's a useful tradeoff of DOF vs. vignetting. A bit of black
    Sharpie on the outside surface is a reasonable poor-man's version--it
    comes off easily with a bit of methanol and won't leave a residue.

    Cheers

    Phil Hobbs

    --
    Dr Philip C D Hobbs
    Principal Consultant
    ElectroOptical Innovations LLC / Hobbs ElectroOptics
    Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics
    Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

    http://electrooptical.net
    http://hobbs-eo.com

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