james_lawler Posted November 8, 2002 Share Posted November 8, 2002 Nikon N65 real verses indicated Aperture I just bought a new N65 with a Quantaray lens and have this question. The on-the-lens aperture settings for this 28-90 focal length lens are F3.5 - F22 however, when I dial in the aperture using the "control wheel" on the camera, the range of aperture settings are F5.3 - F38. How does this work? Would the camera stop the lens down farther in auto mode than it would if used on a totally manual camera, or is it shooting at F22 and reducing shutter speed to gain a "simulated" F32? Thanks in advance, Jim Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray Posted November 8, 2002 Share Posted November 8, 2002 I suspect your lens is a 28-90mm f/3.5-5.3 This means that when you are zoomed out at 28mm (wide angle) your largest aperture is f/3.5. When you zoom in (telephoto) to 90mm, your largest aperture is now f/5.3. As you zoom in you lose your largest aperture (but you apparently gain a smaller aperture on the telephoto end). So to recap, at the 28mm end your aperture range is f/3.5 - f/22 and zoomed in at 90mm, your aperture range is f/5.3 - f/38 This is a design tradeoff to keep your lens lightweight and reasonably priced. Professional zoom lenses do not have these varying apertures ... but then again they weigh a lot and cost an arm and a leg. good luck Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ellis_vener_photography Posted November 8, 2002 Share Posted November 8, 2002 Let me guess . you are zoomed out to 90mm or are in macro mode when you get the f/5.3-f/38 readings, right? what does it readwhen you are not in macro mode or are at 28mm.<P>This is typical of variable aperture zoom lenses. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james_lawler Posted November 8, 2002 Author Share Posted November 8, 2002 You folks are amazing! Thank you both !! When I'm zoomed out to 28mm the range is F3.5 - F22 at 90mm it's F5.6 - F38 But now I wonder, are these "whole" F stops? For example, doesn't the range of F stops go from F2.8 to F4 Does 3.5 lie in the middle as a "half stop"? Conversely is not the other end F32 to F45 making F38 fall in between? Thanks again, Jim Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ellis_vener_photography Posted November 8, 2002 Share Posted November 8, 2002 yes, those are not whole f-stops, "f/3.5" is f/f/2.8 + 2/3rds. itreally is pretty irrelevant what it says if you are using the built-in meter. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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