John Bantin 101 Posted August 2, 2012 Since art directors love to 'discover' pictures within pictures, thereby awarding themselves the credit for making a picture out of nothing, they love to crop off-centre. To this end I have now equipped myself with a D800 and 15mm so that I can shoot lots of extra space all round my subject. Of course, the dome port needs to give a sharp image across the frame which mine do with fish-eye lenses. However, if you are the one that needs pleasing, make your own mind up if it's sharp enough. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PeteAtkinson 53 Posted August 6, 2012 Here's the latest iteration of my plastic garden mesh test chart, 1m x 1.5m, attached to the bottom of the pool with bathroom sucker hooks. This is the Sigma 8-16 at f16 behind a custom 8" hemispherical dome, If it doesn't fill the angle of view, I simply place it in the corner of the picture. I hook my feet over the edge of the pool to get more stability floating on the surface. Attached to the side of the pool might be better for camera shake. When I built housings, I was always careful to build the domes so the centre of curvature coincided with the apparent front entrance pupil of each lens. I liked the 18mm f2.8 a lot. The corner looked good to me, but I was looking at a slide with an 8x loupe. With the advent of digital and zoom rectilinear lenses like the 12-24 and 8-16,the corners seemd bad, but then I was looking at them at 100% on a good monitor. I tried the 18mm the other day on the D7000 with the 9" Nauticam dome and the corners were far better than I can get at an equivalent aperture with the 12-24. But on a crop sensor the 18 is not usefully wide. I will be interested t try it on a full-frame camera sometime. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jonny shaw 16 Posted August 6, 2012 I have been using this software and charts with another guy in Sydney to test still and cine lenses http://www.imatest.com/ I produces some really interesting results, and really shows where lenses fail on the corners. The guy the owns it (Pawel Achtel) has created a rig that locks the camera in place too so that the results are repeatable. He used it when testing the resolution of Nikonos lenses for his Deep X rig. We will be also testing my Gates Deep Epic with the Tokina 10-17, 11-16, Canon 16-35L, plus we have some other results with Zeiss MkII behind Aquatica domes. I'm sure if anyone is based in Sydney and had any more lenses and port options we could organise something. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rui_Guerra 6 Posted March 7, 2013 A very inexpensive test chart to do, at whatever size you want will be a simple white 3mm thickness PVC board (I use one with around 1 m wide). Then one simply mark (at the edges) 5 or 10 cm spaces all around. To make the grid (to focus or to evaluate edge sharpness or lens distortion - optical or chromatic) just use black electrical tape. It's quite easy and quick to make lots of horizontal and vertical lines (the grid) and two at the diagonals. Then you can put in in the pool floor or (better) at a pool wall (just make tho small holes at the corners and suspend it with some line and weights (out of the water) at the pool side. You can even use a tripod with a quick release plate so you can repeat results at exact the same distance while you change lens/port/extensions. Cheers, Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ronyx 6 Posted March 7, 2013 This is a great idea. Along with standards for target and shooting distance how about the same for target illumination? I happen to write procedures for work and would be happy to contribute to a writen testing procedure. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
calypso3 2 Posted March 7, 2013 I am new to this forum. I go underwater for more than 41 years and underwater photographer for 20 years. I have a Nikon D300 in Sealux CD300 UW housing. Objectives: Nikkor 10.5 DX and sigma 17-70 macro. I want to buy a wide angle zoom and are very torn between this two: Nikkor 12-24 f4 or Nikkor 10-24 f3 ,5-4, 5. Some of you advise me on the right choice? thanks Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rui_Guerra 6 Posted March 7, 2013 The inclusion of illumination tests will be welcome and useful for someone who is not sure about what to buy or just wants to knows exactly the light quality and intensity of one's strobes/video light. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Graggs 3 Posted January 5, 2014 Did this thread ever get anywhere.. it seems to have died a death? I am having some dome port dilemmas which a Sea & Sea MDX 5II and a 16~35mm USM L lens and I was hoping to find a conclusion here. There are lots of good ideas here, Is anyone interested in trying to resurrect this? I can knock up a test chart and share it, if we can agree on some content... I propose a combination of the mesh idea of Pete Atkinson and smaller charts positioned at key places. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rui_Guerra 6 Posted January 13, 2014 (edited) The problem of too many lens/domes/strobes on the market will be a challenge to test everything. I've done my tests with my Subal gear and my lens in order to exclude /include some bad/good combinations and to have a good feel of distances/magnifications that each combo can deliver. I've used the test chart I've mentioned above. I don't mind to where some thoughts and some personal conclusions if there are some more people that have done the same thing, so we can start some sort of database. But of coarse that it will be just a starting point, because I believe that each photographer should do his own test with is own gear. Edited January 13, 2014 by Rui_Guerra 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JamesR 26 Posted January 15, 2014 Has anyone tried a 35/1.8 or 50/1.8 in a small dome (like the zen dp-100)? Just wondering...I have a 10-17 but just thinking about how some of my other lenses might do. Yes, I am kinda bored, thinking about upcoming trip, etc Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ianmarsh 37 Posted December 9, 2019 (edited) I have recently been up to no good in my wife's soaker tub. (I live a long way from the ocean) I tested the Nikon 8-15 Fisheye and Nikon 20mm f/1.8. My goal was to assess the Seacam Superdome vs 8 inch glass Subal FE port with differing extensions. The Subal port chart calls for a 20 mm extension, as does Seacam. Adam Hanlon reported using a 30mm extension with the Superdome when testing the 20mm f/1.8. (Not sure where he got his secret sauce.) I used the D850 in Nauticam with the appropriate port adapters. My results showed no clear difference between the two ports with the 8-15mm (no big surprise) but images with both lenses were sharper with a longer extension (33mm) with the Subal dome. There was minimal vignetting with the 8-15, and none with the 20mm lens. I purchased a 28mm ring for Subal/3 and got similar results to the 33mm ring, but without vignetting. The 20mm rectilinear performed quite poorly below f/11 and was marginal (by Nikonos standards) at f/16. That is the smallest aperture on that lens. It performs well centrally, and would be OK with blue water at the edges. No diopter was used. The 20mm lens did perform much better with the Superdome, and 20mm extension, although not great. Same conclusion as above. The 8-15 was good in both ports, with some improvement with the 28mm extension over the 20mm with the Subal port. I did not test the Superdome at longer extensions. Circular images where good with both ports, and also showed vignetting at 33mm extension, but not 28mm on Subal Conclusion: The 8-15 performed well in all setups, somewhat improved with the 28mm extension. The 20mm lens was marginal in performance with the Subal dome and acceptable with Superdome. Probably not worth the extra effort. The point of all this was to decide whether the Superdome was worth humping around the world with it's size and weight. I concluded that apart from over/unders there was not much advantage to me. I think in future I will leave my Superdome at home. Edited December 9, 2019 by ianmarsh 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Interceptor121 765 Posted December 9, 2019 1 hour ago, ianmarsh said: I have recently been up to no good in my wife's soaker tub. (I live a long way from the ocean) I tested the Nikon 8-15 Fisheye and Nikon 20mm f/1.8. My goal was to assess the Seacam Superdome vs 8 inch glass Subal FE port with differing extensions. The Subal port chart calls for a 20 mm extension, as does Seacam. Adam Hanlon reported using a 30mm extension with the Superdome when testing the 20mm f/1.8. (Not sure where he got his secret sauce.) I used the D850 in Nauticam with the appropriate port adapters. My results showed no clear difference between the two ports with the 8-15mm (no big surprise) but images with both lenses were sharper with a longer extension (33mm) with the Subal dome. There was minimal vignetting with the 8-15, and none with the 20mm lens. I purchased a 28mm ring for Subal/3 and got similar results to the 33mm ring, but without vignetting. The 20mm rectilinear performed quite poorly below f/11 and was marginal (by Nikonos standards) at f/16. That is the smallest aperture on that lens. It performs well centrally, and would be OK with blue water at the edges. No diopter was used. The 20mm lens did perform much better with the Superdome, and 20mm extension, although not great. Same conclusion as above. The 8-15 was good in both ports, with some improvement with the 28mm extension over the 20mm with the Subal port. I did not test the Superdome at longer extensions. Circular images where good with both ports, and also showed vignetting at 33mm extension, but not 28mm on Subal Conclusion: The 8-15 performed well in all setups, somewhat improved with the 28mm extension. The 20mm lens was marginal in performance with the Subal dome and acceptable with Superdome. Probably not worth the extra effort. The point of all this was to decide whether the Superdome was worth humping around the world with it's size and weight. I concluded that apart from over/unders there was not much advantage to me. I think in future I will leave my Superdome at home. If one dome is 10 cm radius and the other is 12 with the same lens you need two cm more. Fisheye lenses tend to have the entrance pupil right at the end of the lens you can find those on panotools https://wiki.panotools.org/Entrance_Pupil_Database#First_party_lenses For a fisheye lens generally you can try the longest extension until it sees the petals and vignettes and this gives you the best set up. On a fisheye lens I doubt you will be able to see the difference between a 10 cm and 12 cm radius but for a rectilinear lens those 2 cm are worth times 4 for focus distance. You should double check you are using the superdome with the correct extension for the rectilinear lens. In general 20 mm is not very wide however and large domes are not so important. Looking at this lens the entrance pupil is probably inside the housing so if you were using extensions (that will not vignette as the dome is huge) you are probably in a situation where the lens has a lot of distortion and the quality is compromised. Looking at entrance pupils of other nikon prime lenses they all look pretty poor performers. Zoom like 10-24 or 14-24 that are longer lenses will most likely do better at least at wide end due to the geometry of the housing. As you can read I do a lot of tests in the sink or pools.... 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ianmarsh 37 Posted December 9, 2019 Super helpful:) I have not heard of this recipe before, but it does make sense. I am not clear on how Subal, Seacam etc come up with their recommendations, I am guessing by doing tests in their kitchen sinks also:))) ian Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Interceptor121 765 Posted December 9, 2019 (edited) 13 minutes ago, ianmarsh said: Super helpful:) I have not heard of this recipe before, but it does make sense. I am not clear on how Subal, Seacam etc come up with their recommendations, I am guessing by doing tests in their kitchen sinks also:))) ian Nauticam has a macro slide and I can confirm their numbers on the lenses I have to be accurate and backed up by theory. They have no idea of the theory I just explained to you but their empirical work matches it confirming the theory is accurate! For other manufacturers I have had no dealings so I cannot make any comments what I can say is that once you know a few parameters you will know very soon what you need... Edited December 9, 2019 by Interceptor121 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites