| The resolution benefits of larger formats aren't as big as you might initially think for a number of closely interrelated reasons. First, you always end up shooting at narrower apertures with larger formats (as the lenses have longer focal lengths for the same field of view, and hence less depth of field for the same field of view). In practice it's rare to shoot with a wider aperture than f/16 with 4x5. Diffraction therefore negates some of the potential resolution advantage of the larger sensor. Second, large format lenses typically don't have the same resolution as lenses for smaller formats. This is partly because you can't have your optical cake and eat it (wider coverage comes at the price of lower resolution, all else being equal), and partly because the lenses are designed to be shot at small apertures anyway. Third, owing to the typical focal lengths used, near-perfect focus will only be achievable in small areas of most 4x5 photos. You may get some of the resolution benefits you were hoping for, but only on that one tree that you focused on! Fourth, you typically need long exposures with 4x5. Resolutions above ~20MP can't be achieved if the tiniest amount of camera shake or subject movement occurs. In my experience (with cheap 4x5 equipment), I can usually capture slightly more detail than my 24MP D3300 with kit lens, if everything goes right. But then, anything you shoot with a 4x5 camera has to be standing pretty still, and stitching multiple shots to increase resolution is trivial with digital. So I'd say that as awesome as a 4x5 negative is, the resolution advantages are marginal at best. It's absolutely not the case that you are getting 10x the resolution because the negative is 10x as long/wide. |
Many respectable sources estimate 35mm to approach 24MP in the best conditions with specific film, 120 to be in the 40-80MP range, and 4x5 to be 100-300MP.
Tim Parkin is one of the better commentators on this subject: http://www.sonyalpharumors.com/sony-36-megapixels-vs-6x7-vel...
To address some of your other points: good LF glass can approach 70/70/50 line pairs per mm which is still really good, diffraction doesn't affect resolution as much as some people think, and f11-f16 is the sweet spot on a lot of modern LF glass - you don't need long exposures with those apertures and Portra 400, for example.