stylgeo
Suspended / Banned
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- 832
- Edit My Images
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I know that most of us have a UV or Skylight filter in front of most of our lenses just for protection. I know I do. The two lenses that I don't have a UV to protect the front element are my nifty 50 and the lensbaby. There are 2 reasons. First of all, when I had a cheap £5 UV on the nifty I noticed a great loss in IQ, so I took it off thinking that I should buy a better one. The second reason is why I never bothered buying any filters for these two lenses, and it's because they are so cheap that I didn't feel the pressure of doing it.
I've had my Sigma 120-300 f/2.8 for a year now and i've been more than happy with the results even wide open. What was bugging me was the loss of IQ when I used TCs on that lens. I ended up selling the 2X because it was just too bad and with the 1.4x I was always stopping it down to at least f/9 to get the results I was after. The interesting thing is that i was getting uniform results of bad IQ in all my photos. When shooting wide open at f/4 with the TC, from the middle of the frame and the right of it, the photos were really sharp, but in the left side of the frame it was just bad. I posted a thread here a while ago and you guys told me that it was probably due to misaligned elements in the lens and i needed to send it for repairs. i never found the time and opted to either use it without any TCs or just stopping down, which wasn't a problem during the summer since I was in Cyprus for 2 months and I was getting really fast shutterspeeds even at f/16. Coming back to the UK, I realised that I would really need to shoot wide open to get acceptable shutterspeeds. But it was really bugging me, so before deciding to send it to Sigma for repairs (I would have to pay for it since I bought it second hand and it's not under warranty anymore) i decided to give it a thorough test.
Looking to shoot something flat with lots of detail I ended up using the box of the ColourCatcher I'm using for my laundry
. I had the camera on a sturdy tripod, connected via USB with my PC and controlling it remotely and using MLU with a remote shutter control. I went to great lengths to ensure that my plane of focus was parallel with my target and chose a single focusing point. I refocused for every shot and took several photos for every set-up and chose the best one for my comparisons.
The UV was the problem. And the funny thing is that it's not a cheap one.
It's a £100 Heliopan 105mm UV.
These are some 100% crops of my test. The centre focusing point was at the bottom right corner of the image with the hand and the number 1 on the top.
First some examples from a bit to the right of the centre point
f/4 with filter
f/4 without filter
f/8 with filter
f/8 without filter
As you can see, there is little to no difference in these photos, except from the f/4 ones.
Now from the centre and a bit on the left of the same photos
f/4 with filter
f/4 without filter
f/8 with filter
f/8 without filter
As you can see, the problem I said before is evident in these photos. But what makes the filter affect the IQ in that way? Only on one side of the frame? What I know is that i wont be using it anymore that's for sure!
I've had my Sigma 120-300 f/2.8 for a year now and i've been more than happy with the results even wide open. What was bugging me was the loss of IQ when I used TCs on that lens. I ended up selling the 2X because it was just too bad and with the 1.4x I was always stopping it down to at least f/9 to get the results I was after. The interesting thing is that i was getting uniform results of bad IQ in all my photos. When shooting wide open at f/4 with the TC, from the middle of the frame and the right of it, the photos were really sharp, but in the left side of the frame it was just bad. I posted a thread here a while ago and you guys told me that it was probably due to misaligned elements in the lens and i needed to send it for repairs. i never found the time and opted to either use it without any TCs or just stopping down, which wasn't a problem during the summer since I was in Cyprus for 2 months and I was getting really fast shutterspeeds even at f/16. Coming back to the UK, I realised that I would really need to shoot wide open to get acceptable shutterspeeds. But it was really bugging me, so before deciding to send it to Sigma for repairs (I would have to pay for it since I bought it second hand and it's not under warranty anymore) i decided to give it a thorough test.
Looking to shoot something flat with lots of detail I ended up using the box of the ColourCatcher I'm using for my laundry
The UV was the problem. And the funny thing is that it's not a cheap one.
It's a £100 Heliopan 105mm UV.
These are some 100% crops of my test. The centre focusing point was at the bottom right corner of the image with the hand and the number 1 on the top.
First some examples from a bit to the right of the centre point
f/4 with filter
f/4 without filter
f/8 with filter
f/8 without filter
As you can see, there is little to no difference in these photos, except from the f/4 ones.
Now from the centre and a bit on the left of the same photos
f/4 with filter
f/4 without filter
f/8 with filter
f/8 without filter
As you can see, the problem I said before is evident in these photos. But what makes the filter affect the IQ in that way? Only on one side of the frame? What I know is that i wont be using it anymore that's for sure!



