Quote:
Originally Posted by Itchy
I know what you mean. There has been several deep discussions about this on digital_astro. It appears that all the Lens manufacturers are now facing this fact: DSLRs are showing up faults in their lenses that no one noticed before on film.  Strange but true.
cheers
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No it is not strange.The demands a modern sensor places on an optic is extreme to say the least.
In the past with film how many people could zoom in to 300% of image size for a cursory examination of the image quality.
So what did everybody do? They fudged! Present the image in its best (excuse the pun) light.
You cannot beat a quality lens, and even then, if you want to be a perfectionist test several versions of the same lens.Yes there are manufacturing differences which are random.
If you want to know more just ask.
Have you also considered that with film the three colour layers are at different positions so hiding the inherent chromatic aberration?
The other thing hiding these problems is that film was formulated to represent human vision (spectrally).They have not got this quite right with digital.It can't be hidden.
Bert