I may need to shoot faulty computer circuit boards and seek the lens capable of shooting the tiniest of wires with great clarity. Which one will give me the most zoom?
Canonista Senior Member 382 posts Joined Dec 2006 Location: Michigan More info | Nov 23, 2007 20:16 | #1 I may need to shoot faulty computer circuit boards and seek the lens capable of shooting the tiniest of wires with great clarity. Which one will give me the most zoom?
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Chandler. Goldmember ![]() 2,784 posts Likes: 4 Joined Dec 2006 Location: Issaquah More info | Nov 23, 2007 20:16 | #2 MP-E 65mm macro photo. starts at 1x, goes to 5x. There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs. ~ Ansel Adams
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cdifoto Don't get pissy with me ![]() 34,108 posts Likes: 55 Joined Dec 2005 More info | Nov 23, 2007 20:17 | #3 Zoom isn't really the right word, BUT the Canon MP-E 65mm Did you lose Digital Photo Professional (DPP)? Get it here
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rhys Dis-Membered ![]() 5,351 posts Likes: 2 Joined May 2006 Location: Columbia SC More info | Nov 23, 2007 20:35 | #4 I looked into a dedicated macro lens but decided for my purposes that a set of Kenko tubes - the ones that work with EF and EF-S - and my 17-85IS lens offered the best option of stabilisation and macro. How many stabilised macro lenses are there? Rhys
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Chandler. Goldmember ![]() 2,784 posts Likes: 4 Joined Dec 2006 Location: Issaquah More info | Nov 24, 2007 05:19 | #5 rhys wrote in post #4373295 ![]() I looked into a dedicated macro lens but decided for my purposes that a set of Kenko tubes - the ones that work with EF and EF-S - and my 17-85IS lens offered the best option of stabilisation and macro. How many stabilised macro lenses are there? Noink's 105mm VR. There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs. ~ Ansel Adams
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Nov 24, 2007 08:01 | #6 Canonista, ![]() Remote Board 2aclick for specsIMAGE LINK: http://johnbdigital.com/macro/remote_board2.htm#5x ![]() Sony A6400, A6500, Apeman A80, & a bunch of Lenses.............
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Glenn NK Goldmember ![]() 4,630 posts Likes: 3 Joined Oct 2006 Location: Victoria, BC More info | Nov 24, 2007 12:57 | #7 Just a small question - how small are the parts you must record? When did voluptuous become voluminous?
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airfrogusmc I'm a chimper. There I said it... More info | Heres a shot I did for a medical supply client where I used a 100 2.8 Macro. These vials are only about an inch high.
The 65 macro is also a very nice lens...
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Nov 25, 2007 01:19 | #9 Glenn NK wrote in post #4376220 ![]() Just a small question - how small are the parts you must record? Very often when shooting closeups (not even to the true 1:1 macro stage) I focus carefully on a flower, and when viewed on the computer screen, I find spider webs that were not visible in the eyepiece. Spider web material is "quite small". The lens used is a 100 f/2.8 macro and I'm usually working at f/5.6. I would think that circuirt boards being essentially flat that shooting at f/11 would provide adequate detail without going to the expense of the MP-E 65 mm. In fact, I would try tubes on a 50 mm lens first. John_B's closeup of the curcuit board and chip might do in a pinch, but a bit more magnification would be nice. Right now we're using a microscope with a built in camera, but the resolution is so low all the pics look like cell phone camera shots. For what we're being paid I'd like to come up with something "prettier".
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Nov 25, 2007 08:02 | #10 Canonista, Sony A6400, A6500, Apeman A80, & a bunch of Lenses.............
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SkipD Cream of the Crop ![]() 20,476 posts Likes: 165 Joined Dec 2002 Location: Southeastern WI, USA More info | Nov 25, 2007 08:35 | #11 As in the second of John's examples above, you need to consider depth of field as well. With the higher magnification, you may not be able to stop the lens down far enough to get the nearest and furthest objects in focus - just like the posted example by John. Skip Douglas
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Chandler. Goldmember ![]() 2,784 posts Likes: 4 Joined Dec 2006 Location: Issaquah More info | Nov 25, 2007 21:41 | #12 If you want high quality images at the microscopic level, there is always DSLR photomicrography. There are no rules for good photographs, there are only good photographs. ~ Ansel Adams
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