I have question regarding light source.neuroanatomist said:Works great, IMO. You need a stable tripod, and give it lots of light, ideally >10 EV (it reports light level) from an incandescent source or direct sun (not fluorescent or LED).
DARSON said:I have question regarding light source.neuroanatomist said:Works great, IMO. You need a stable tripod, and give it lots of light, ideally >10 EV (it reports light level) from an incandescent source or direct sun (not fluorescent or LED).
Is one halogen lamp 150W is sufficient to properly illuminate the target? I find it difficult to acquire incandescent lamp ( in my country of residence) with powerful bulb. Mostly LED or Fluorescent with max power 60W and those are not recommended for Test
I hope you don't mind asking me this question in your post gqllc007
You're right, those 60W are equivalent to incandescent.Mt Spokane Photography said:DARSON said:I have question regarding light source.neuroanatomist said:Works great, IMO. You need a stable tripod, and give it lots of light, ideally >10 EV (it reports light level) from an incandescent source or direct sun (not fluorescent or LED).
Is one halogen lamp 150W is sufficient to properly illuminate the target? I find it difficult to acquire incandescent lamp ( in my country of residence) with powerful bulb. Mostly LED or Fluorescent with max power 60W and those are not recommended for Test
I hope you don't mind asking me this question in your post gqllc007
In a dark room? Probably not even close. You can't do a accurate job when adjusting manually either, in low light, AF systems operate erratically. FoCal will tell you the light level and warn you if there is not enough. What happens in low light is that results are not repeatable, so you never are sure that the value you get is the right one.
A 60W Fluorescent or led bulb would be fine, but I doubt if you will find them, the ones you are talking about are likely 7 watts. I use twelve 32 watt CRI 98 fluorescent tubes, and even then, I'd like more light. They have reflectors as well.
Go outdoors on in the early morning before the sun hits your target, or on a bright but overcast day, you should have adequate light.
DARSON said:60W are equivalent to incandescent.
Going outdoors- I'm worried if I will have enough time to do calibration As I live in Middle East and Sunrise and Sunset is much shorter here than in other part of the world
I saw on DP AFMA tips where Neuroanatomist was using 3 lamps each 150W for the LensAlign MkII or the DataColor SpyderLensCal . I cannot find lamps which are able to accept more powerful bulb.
How about 500W
http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Iodine-tungsten-lamp-holder-lawn-lights-spotlights-solar-lamp-outdoor-300-500w/1437767284.html
Thanks Mackguyver your post is very informaivemackguyver said:Here's an old thread I started on this using FoCal:
http://www.canonrumors.com/forum/index.php?topic=19742.0
neuroanatomist said:Works great, IMO. You need a stable tripod, and give it lots of light, ideally >10 EV (it reports light level) from an incandescent source or direct sun (not fluorescent or LED).
gqllc007 said:Maybe I did the lighting thing all wrong...I used a 150 watt flood light from Home depot and mounted it in a reflector work light from home depot and placed it 2 feet from the chart at a 30 degree angle. The focal program said EV of 10.9 and that is all I used???