View Full Version : 1 stop in light loss = what in %


John Harvey
March 8th, 2005, 11:05 PM
1 stop in light loss = what in % loss from original?

if measured light equaled 100% and you stoped down the iris by 1, what is the percentage loss?

thanks for the edu.

jh

Jack Smith
March 8th, 2005, 11:25 PM
50 %

John Harvey
March 9th, 2005, 12:41 AM
wow.
so one stop more would be half again? IE 25%of the original 100%

2 stops = 25%

jh

Aaron Koolen
March 9th, 2005, 01:13 AM
Yup.

Aaron

Kris Carrillo
March 9th, 2005, 07:36 PM
also, keep in mind that your camera may not stop down incrementally in full stops. both the PD150 and DVX100 can be adjusted in half-stop increments. the full stop scale is:

1 - 1.4 - 2 - 2.8 - 4 - 5.6 - 8 - 11 - 16 - 22



hope this helps,

kris

John Harvey
March 9th, 2005, 10:11 PM
why the jumps from 8-11-16-22?

jh

Kyle Ringin
March 9th, 2005, 11:37 PM
The scale starts at 1 to get every second stop:
1, 2, 4, 8, 16
and 1.4 for every other:
1.4 ,2.8 ,5.6, 11.2(rounded to 11), 22

This gives double/half the light with each full stop.

Cheers.

John Harvey
March 10th, 2005, 01:12 AM
when I'm on a set I hear the DP's and thier "people" talking "two eight" alot, figuring they mean a 2.8 stop. is this some mean value they are looking for from setup to setup for continuity?

jh

Josh Bass
March 10th, 2005, 01:22 AM
See also this informative thread that I started:

http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?s=&threadid=28503&highlight=numbers

One thing that's neat and helps you remember is that every OTHER stop is twice/half that of the one that is. . .um. . .two before it. . .er

What I mean is - 1, 1.4, 2, 2.8, etc.

2 is double 1, 2.8 is double 1.4, and it goes on like that.

halves and thirds, I don't know if there's an easy trick to them other than just rote memory.

John Harvey
March 10th, 2005, 01:38 AM
THE PERFECT THREAD!

Opps, sorry for shouting.

that was a good read indeed. now I understand, just don't ask me to explain it yet.

jh

Josh Bass
March 10th, 2005, 02:26 AM
My ignorance is your intellectual treasure.

Aaron Koolen
March 10th, 2005, 03:10 PM
As I said in that thread, it's just square root of 2 times an f stop is the value of the next one:

1 * 1.4 = 1.4

1.4 * 1.4 = 2

2 * 1.4 = 2.8

etc etc etc

(approx here of course)

Aaron

Kyle Ringin
March 10th, 2005, 03:12 PM
Sorry, I forgot to mention the doubling thing to get every second stop, which was kinda the point of my post...