Lens Terminology
ALC CONTROL
Photometric control, measures light intensity.
Sets the iris to react to bright objects in a
picture that do not affect the overall video
level. Turning the control towards Peak will
increase sensitivity, towards Average will
decrease sensitivity.
ANGLE OF
VIEW
The angular range that can be focused within the
image size. Small focal lengths give a wide angle
of view, and large focal lengths give a narrow
angle of view. Sometimes referred to as Field of
View. Formula to determine
angle of view.
APERTURE
Relates to the F-number. The effective aperture
of a lens is not its actual diameter but the
diameter of the image of the iris seen from the
front of the lens. Larger apertures equal smaller
F-number.
AUTO-IRIS LENS
A lens with an electrically controlled iris. The
circuit controlling the iris is set to maintain a
constant video level in varying lighting
conditions.
CCTV
Acronym for Closed Circuit Television.
CCVE
Acronym for Closed Circuit Video Equipment.
C-MOUNT
"C-mount" lenses have a flange back
distance of 17.526mm vs. 12.5mm for
"CS-mount" lenses. C-mount lenses can
be used on CS-mount cameras by utilizing a 5mm
adapter or adjusting the camera for C-mount
lenses.
CS-MOUNT
"CS-mount" lenses have a flange back
distance of 12.5mm vs. 17.526mm for
"C-mount" lenses. Because of the
shorter back focal distance, CS-mount lenses can
only be used on CS-mount cameras. Your picture
will be out of focus if you use a CS-mount lens
on a C-mount camera.
DC TYPE LENS
An auto-iris lens without an internal circuit to
control the iris. All iris control voltages come
from a circuit located within the camera.
DEPTH OF FIELD (FOCUS)
The zone in the front and back of the area
focused upon that will remain in focus. Anything
within this depth of field will appear sharp.
Depth of field has the following features 1.
Larger F-numbers give greater depth of field. The
more the iris is stopped down the greater the
depth of field. 2. Shorter focal lengths give
greater depth of field. 3. Greater subject
distance gives greater depth of field. 4. Depth
of field is greater behind the subject than in
front.
EXTENSION TUBE
Kit consisting of various size spacers that are
used between the lens and the camera to reduce
the lens M.O.D. Generally used for very close-up
applications. Not recommended for zoom lenses due
to loss of tracking.
F-DROP
The drop of the F-number of a while zooming at
full aperture. The entrance pupil of a zoom lens
changes in diameter as the focal length is
changed. As you zoom towards the telephoto end,
the entrance pupil gradually enlarges. When the
entrance pupil diameter is equal to the diameter
of the focusing lens group, it cannot become any
larger. This causes the F-drop.
F-NUMBER
Indicates the brightness of an image formed by
the lens. A smaller F-number means a brighter
image.
FIELD OF VIEW
See Angle of View.
FOCAL LENGTH
The basic parameter to determine the image
position, magnification, and angle of view of a
lens.
GAIN CONTROL
Reduces iris oscillation (iris opens and closes
rapidly in bright light). If oscillation occurs,
adjust CCW until iris stops oscillating.
IMAGE SIZE
Reference to the size of an image formed by the
lens onto the camera pick-up device. The current
standards are 1", 2/3", 1/2",
1/3", and 1/4" measured diagonally.
LEVEL CONTROL
Main iris control. Used to set the auto-iris
circuit to a video level desired by the user.
After set-up, the circuit will adjust the iris to
maintain this video level in changing lighting
conditions. Turning the control towards High will
open the iris, towards Low will close the iris.
MANUAL IRIS LENS
A lens with a manual adjustment to set the iris
opening (F stop) in a fixed position. Generally
used for fixed lighting applications.
MECHANICAL BACK FOCAL
DISTANCE (FLANGE BACK)
The distance from the flange of the lens
(beginning of the lens mount) to the focal plane.
C-mount lenses have a flange back distance of
17.526mm vs. 12.5mm for CS-mount. Difference between Optical and
Mechanical Back Focal Distance.
MINIMUM OBJECT DISTANCE
(M.O.D.)
The closest distance a given lens will be able to
focus upon an object. This is measured from the
vertex (front) of the lens to the object. Wide
angle lenses generally have a smaller M.O.D. than
large focal length lenses.
OPTICAL BACK FOCAL
DISTANCE
The distance from the rear most portion of the
lens glass to the image plane. Difference between Optical and
Mechanical Back Focal Distance.
PINHOLE LENS
Lens used for applications where the camera/lens
must be hidden. Front of lens has a small opening
to allow the lens to view an entire room through
a small hole in a wall.
PRE-POSITION LENSES
(PZF)
Zoom lenses which utilize a variable-resistor
(potentiometer) to indicate zoom/focus position
to the lens controller. After initial set-up,
this allows the operator to view different
pre-set areas quickly without having to readjust
the zoom and focus each time.
SLIP CLUTCH
A part of the lens mounts which allows the lens
position to be adjusted to a desired position
after the lens is mounted. The lens will turn
(slip) up to 350O until reaching a physical
limit.
SPOT FILTER
A supplement to the iris which allows the lens to
have a larger F-number than is physically
possible with the iris only. These usually range
from F88 to F1600. This allows very sensitive
cameras to view bright scenes easily. The iris of
a lens without a spot filter would not be able to
close down enough in bright light to achieve a
usable picture.
T-NUMBER
An F-number expresses the speed of the lens on
the assumption that the lens transmits 100% of
the incident light. In reality, different lenses
have different transmittance, so lenses with the
same F-number may actually have different speeds.
The T-number solves this by taking both the iris
diameter and transmittance into account. Two
lenses with the same T-number will always give
the same image brightness.
TRACKING
A zoom lens' ability to remain in focus during
the entire zoom range from wide angle to
telephoto position.
VIDEO TYPE LENS
An auto-iris lens with internal circuit which
receives voltage and a video signal from the
camera to adjust the iris.
ZOOM LENS
A lens with a variable focal length to obtain a
wide angle picture to a narrow angle picture to
cover a variety of needs.
ZOOM RATIO
The ratio of the starting focal length (wide
position) to the ending focal length (telephoto
position) of a zoom lens. A lens with a 10X zoom
ratio will magnify the image at the wide angle
end by 10 times when at the telephoto position. |