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Chris Ross

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  1. Personally I would use the fact that the print supplier uses Adobe RGB as a deciding factor in choosing a vendor, it indicates they understand colour and are prepared to make the most of their printers to give the best possible prints. You might pay a little more, but to me it's worth it if you are going to display your work. I actually print my own with an Epson P800 and my printer has been profiled so I can soft proof the image before committing to print.
  2. You'll need a couple of things, first a zoom gear - until it is on the port charts that means designing and printing one. Sometimes you'll be able to find a zoom gear from another model lens that will work, but usually a custom gear is required. Second you need to decide which port you want to use with it. basically with Nauticam it's either the 180mm or 230mm. Some of the newer 16 - xx mm zooms work fine with the 180mm, including the newest Sony zooms and some of the Tamron zooms. Others need the 230mm port for good corner performance. Hard to tell which is needed until someone tests it, Third you need to work out what extension is needed. getting this right is important for good performance behind a dome. This involve placing the entrance pupil at the centre of curvature of the dome. You need to work out where the entrance pupil is and do some geometry to work out where it is in relation to the dome. Not incredibly complex but you need to comfortable with geoemtry and the required calculations. The Caveat is that the calculation may be able to be done, but the lens might perform better with a little more or less extension when physically tested. The alternative it to take a stab and and try it with different extensions if you have them available, If you don't have access to a port and some extensions probably you need to wait for Nauticam or some other interested person with the right resources to test the lens. Maybe @Phil Rudin will test it sometime?
  3. I think it depends on what they are printing with and the medium. Any service printing with an Epson or Canon large format printer using their pigment inks can accept Adobe RGB as these printers cover the 100% of the Adobe RGB colour space. For example in your area this service specifies you should use Adobe RGB : https://www.nwfineartprinting.com/file-preparation.html If the service has a file preparation page it's generally a good sign. It's even better if they have printer profiles you can download for soft proofing. It's really important to use a calibrated monitor and also to ensure monitor brightness is set to the correct value of around 100 cD/m2.
  4. I have found the greater range of blues/greens in Adobe RGB gives me nicer looking water - this is quite obvious when converting to sRGB for web posting. I firmly believe there is a benefit of using Adobe RGB in UW images. This of course depends on the printing service and whether the printing method and your monitor can accommodate the Adobe RGB colour space. This needs to be confirmed as if you try to print colours that are out of gamut then the results can be unpredictable. sRGB is a safe but somewhat limiting option.
  5. Printing is whole other universe, there's lots of options these days and the quality can be exceptional. I'll describe what is done for inkjet printing. In general terms you size the image to required dimensions at the native resolution of the printer being used. Printing with archival inks is what I would recommend, a good printer can match the gamut of Adobe RGB but not the brightness range of a quality monitor. I print my own prints on an Epson P880 printer which can do up to A2 size. The choices of printing medium is quite subjective and personal, I tend to favour archival fibre based papers with a lustre finish. If you want to display prints you need to consider reflections from the print - I tend to not like the ultra reflective media that much. You could have a whole chapter on the choice of media available. I generally print with Ilford gold fibre gloss these days. The ideal inkjet workflow outline is as follows: work on a calibrated monitor - the correct brightness is important, if the monitor is too bright the print will look dark. Obtain the profile for the paper of choice from whoever does your printing and soft proof it in photoshop to review any colour changes Generally work in Adobe RGB, it has a wider range of colours and modern inkjets can reproduce 90-100% of that colour space. Make any adjustments needed while viewing in soft proofing. Flatten file, re-size to the required size at the recommended dpi setting Re-size in PS or program you use to the linear dimensions (mm, cm, inches etc), generally I would leave a 10mm border around the image, some printers can do borderless but it is more of a problem to deal with. Sharpen file and preview it at around 50% For practical purposes find a quality printing firm that uses inkjets with archival inks and follow their recommendations for file preparation. Pay attention to requirements such as flattening and no alpha channels that may be specified, i generally work with tiff files. You could also buy a printer - but they have specific requirements, large format printers are big! they also need to be used regularly. Your choice of medium will be restricted to what they have on offer. Possibly get some A4 prints done to test out a vendor and to see how the colours look and the general look of the paper you are thinking about As for format I generally crop to suit the subject to whatever dimensions look pleasing.
  6. Welcome aboard Hugh, hope you find the forums useful.
  7. This likely indicates the problem if this doesn't show up then it is not communicating with the camera. By the description when in manual mode on the trigger the camera doesn't detect it as a flash and it is triggered by the centre contact of hotshoe and the earth of the hotshoe frame. To be recognized by the camera it communicates using the other smaller contacts of the hotshoe. I could be a fault with the hotshoe cable perhaps, you said you checked hotshoe did you try cleaning the contacts perhaps with a pencil eraser? This might be a good first step. Also try looking into the fibre optic connectors to see if you can see the LEDs illuminate, try it at position 0 so you can see how bright they are to be sure you can recognise the LED lighting up then try at position 7 If no light comes in position 7 this ocnfirms trigger is not talking to the camera. Again suggest you PM Pavel to ask advice, he may have additional things you can try.
  8. Believe @Alex_Mustard uses the 0.8:1 unit and prefers it. see this video: I''m sure other Sony users will chime in.
  9. I don't doubt that Nauticam seems prone to this, just sharing my experience. I notice now that my latest housing has a different finish to my previous housings, more of a satin or lustre finish rather than a smooth glossy finish, I would describe it, don't know if it will be an improvement or not, time will tell. There are varying grades of anodising and it is quite possible there are better coatings. If you have a cooler bag, sitting the housing in salt water till you can get it to fresh rinse tank is better than letting it dry out, it's just like more dive time. Don't know what you could do in the shore dive situation sounds like you have to live with it.
  10. I've seen pics of worse Nauticam housings than that. With my housings, it's less dives than yours, but I generally have a damp towel available to cover the housings on dive boats. Presumably the RIB is taking you out from the mother ship, so you shouldn't be in it long?? I don't know. I shore dive a lot at home and have my own car, so the housing only walks from the exit to the car and gets covered with a damp towel. It appears the link you had that the guy has a process to clean up the housing? Perhaps he polishes it? Apparently if you send your housing to Nauticam it comes back like new. As for ceramcote, i'm sure it could work but you would need to strip all the buttons etc I think, remove the rear window, strobe trigger window etc and work out how to mask off all of the o-ring sealing surfaces, in the button holes , the housing back etc. i'm not sure I'd want to have an O-ring trying seal against the coating?? It would need proper research to prepare the surface properly, mask as required etc. and a good applicator to apply it. There would probably be procedures around the protective anodes as well to follow.
  11. you just need to watch which domes you refer to, some of them the bayonet is machined into the metal part of the dome, others use a bolt on lug ring and extension rings typically use a machined bayonet. For example the Zen DP 170 N120 dome does not use a lug ring it appears, while many of the Nauticam domes do. This is the only way to change between S&S and Nauticam mounts without adding extension. For example this S&S dome does not seem to use an interchangeable lug ring so would not be readily adaptable: S&S dome Ebay This is the lug ring for converting Nauticam ports to S&S: lug ring Note it is discontinued but I think available through other vendors?? Also this small S&S dome port appears not to have removable lug ring: dome port 165 while this larger port does: Dome port 210 Regarding the Tokina - yes the adapter is expensive but you can use the one dome setup for all wide angle applications and it's all available to you during the dive, all you miss out on is the long end of the 14-42 behind the WWL.
  12. There's lots of choices possible there, though I would venture the Canon 8-15 option is not lighter than a WWL setup. and the size is very close. Unless you go with a 4"dome most of the dome options will be lighter but a little larger than a WWL setup. Rectilinears need bigger domes, you might get away with a 5-6"dome with 12mm though if you are not fussy about corner sharpness. I'm not sure what your budget is however the 6"acrylic Nauticam dome is $690 new at Backscatter which seems somewhat reasonable for UW gear and you don't need the $350 Nauticam - S&S adapter. You can also use the Panasonic 7-14 in that dome if you want something wider and I expect the 12-45 lens would also fit, it's not on the port chart but given the size of the lens it would be close to the same positioning in the dome. The dome is a little small for lenses that wide but it will work OK, the corners might be a touch soft. It strikes me though that the Nauticam to S&S adapter might be a cheap path to adapting Canon-8-15 or Tokina 10-17 to a m43 camera, it appears to have 60mm of extension and is half the price of the no longer available it seems 34.7mm N85-N120 adapter. It doesn't have a knob but you could use the 3D printed gear I use to mate with the main knob on the housing. Only problem is you would need a 10mm extension ring to get the same extension as used with the Nauticam setup, but S&S doesn't make one. The DP-100ST for S&S might be a solution as it has extension built in. These are excellent solutions for m43 and cover the range from 180° diagonal fisheye through to 28mm FF equivalent in terms of field of view so replace an 8mm fisheye, a 7-14 wide (in terms of horizontal field of view) and will cover about 2/3 of the horizontal field coverage of a WWL.
  13. I would PM Pavel, Have you checked to see if the LEDs on the trigger illuminate when you fire off a shot? Do you get the lightning bolt symbol on the camera screen as mentioned in the manual(on position 7) ? These would be good first steps to check the camera recognises the trigger and that the LEDs fire or not. I ask as this may point to the problem. Also just to confirm, you say the strobe does not fire - I assume you mean the strobe emits no light at all, not that the the strobe fires but the frame is dark?
  14. I would suggest looking into what lenses are supported and how they are before deciding, for example ikelite only sell 6 or 8 inch domes for fisheyes, no 4"offered and only have one flat port for all the macro lenses offered, which reduces working distance on the shorter lenses. Also check how you would go about attaching a WWL if you were interested in that option.
  15. My closeup vision has gone by the wayside, but I can still dive without any sort of closeup lens, but I certainly couldn't use a monitor for my shooting, for me it's a Nauticam 45° viewfinder all the way, the view through it with the diopter adjustment that I can use UW is perfect - easy to see sharpness, setting, no issues with sun or glare and I can use it with the housing sitting on the sea bed.

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