Bob Hart
August 12th, 2008, 02:12 AM
In a rash exhibition of the foolishness I am prone to indulge in and having enough collected bits and pieces handy, I tried the Letus Extreme EX1 production bundle on the SI2K.
The SI2K will mount to the Letus rails - just. The rear platform has to be lowered to just high enough for the small lever handle on the wedgeplate to clear the wide camera base.
The front pillar under the Letus body needs to be almost at its full height.
I tried a Nikon 35mm f1.4 for relay however this is too wide and brings in the edges of the prism path as a vignette.
Previous 2/3" tests I did with the old Letus for XL model hinted that a 50mm prime as in the original Minolta direct relay would have a field-of-view of the groundglass which would not be too wide.
The nearest to 50mm on set today was a 58mm Noct-Nikkor which is good for sharpness down to full-open iris.
With the SI2K on the rails and the Extreme perched precariously on its single pillar, with the 35mm f1.4 on front and the Noct-Nikkor 58mm f1.2 as relay, the "A" and "F" blocks on a Lemac chart appear to resolve, or at least are seen by the camera imager as there is a sharp fine moire displayed on the screen within the blocks.
If the Le brothers' direct relay for 2/3" goes into release, is of equal or better sharpness than the Noct-Nikkor and if there is a B4 mount for the SI2K, then 35mm film emulation of acceptable resolution could be a practical option for the SI2K near to immediately by this method until proper and better accessories are available from the respective vendors.
I shot the Lemac chart and a few faces in ambient interior lighting today. I have yet to extract the footage from the camera.
I have not seen RED footage at its highest practical resolution, so I cannot offer any comparison as to the look.
I am of an age where I am not normally given to being particularly animated about things. However, those around me seemed to think I had been enlivened to a little more than my normal demeanour by this morning's experiments.
If you are prompted to experiment, take exceptional care to make sure the Letus rods are well and truly secure and the tripod mount is likewise. The SI2K is a very heavy camera and the Letus hardware is a little bit light for this task. If the tripod head rolls forwards or backwards to its limit, the rods may release the camera unless the clamp screws are well firmed up. The camera needs to be as far forward as possible yet allowing space for the Allen wrench to fit to tighten the front pillar of the wedgeplate mount.
The SI2K will mount to the Letus rails - just. The rear platform has to be lowered to just high enough for the small lever handle on the wedgeplate to clear the wide camera base.
The front pillar under the Letus body needs to be almost at its full height.
I tried a Nikon 35mm f1.4 for relay however this is too wide and brings in the edges of the prism path as a vignette.
Previous 2/3" tests I did with the old Letus for XL model hinted that a 50mm prime as in the original Minolta direct relay would have a field-of-view of the groundglass which would not be too wide.
The nearest to 50mm on set today was a 58mm Noct-Nikkor which is good for sharpness down to full-open iris.
With the SI2K on the rails and the Extreme perched precariously on its single pillar, with the 35mm f1.4 on front and the Noct-Nikkor 58mm f1.2 as relay, the "A" and "F" blocks on a Lemac chart appear to resolve, or at least are seen by the camera imager as there is a sharp fine moire displayed on the screen within the blocks.
If the Le brothers' direct relay for 2/3" goes into release, is of equal or better sharpness than the Noct-Nikkor and if there is a B4 mount for the SI2K, then 35mm film emulation of acceptable resolution could be a practical option for the SI2K near to immediately by this method until proper and better accessories are available from the respective vendors.
I shot the Lemac chart and a few faces in ambient interior lighting today. I have yet to extract the footage from the camera.
I have not seen RED footage at its highest practical resolution, so I cannot offer any comparison as to the look.
I am of an age where I am not normally given to being particularly animated about things. However, those around me seemed to think I had been enlivened to a little more than my normal demeanour by this morning's experiments.
If you are prompted to experiment, take exceptional care to make sure the Letus rods are well and truly secure and the tripod mount is likewise. The SI2K is a very heavy camera and the Letus hardware is a little bit light for this task. If the tripod head rolls forwards or backwards to its limit, the rods may release the camera unless the clamp screws are well firmed up. The camera needs to be as far forward as possible yet allowing space for the Allen wrench to fit to tighten the front pillar of the wedgeplate mount.