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| left | right |
| Position: 10mm (front) | |
Note that even in these quite small images above, you can clearly see that the railings seem to have moved relative to the building behind. That's parallax at work. If you have difficulty seeing what I am referring to, my parallax demonstration using a small video clip may help.
OK, next let's do the same with the camera as far back as possible. So far back in fact that my wide-angle fisheye lens starts to show the panoramic head itself!
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| left | right |
| Position: 104mm (back) | |
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| left | right |
| Position: 68mm | |
So I take a few test shots near this position and analyse them when I get home. Good job too because 69mm looks to be a better position than 68mm:
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| left (enlarged 400%) | right (enlarged 400%) |
| Position: 68mm | |
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| left (enlarged 400%) | right (enlarged 400%) |
| Position: 69mm | |
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| left (enlarged 400%) | right (enlarged 400%) |
| Position: 70mm | |
Met het bovenstaande wil ik aantonen dat een fout van 0,3mm in het nodal punt een fout kan opleveren van ongeveer 40 pixels.























