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Some people are
confused about the relationship among diopter, magnification
power, total power and focal length. The most common confusion
is between magnification power and total power. The following
is presented by Bertech to help clear up any confusion.
Diopter
is a measurement of a lens’ ability to bend the light of
a viewed object and thereby increase its apparent size.
Each diopter represents a 25% increase in the size an object
is magnified. A four diopter lens (referred to as a 4d lens)
would increase the size of an object by 100%. Viewing a
2” wide object under a 3 diopter (75% increase) magnifier,
would increase the size of the object by 1.5” and cause
the object to appear to the 3.5” wide. The diopter of a
lens can be calculated by dividing the number 40 by the
focal length (in inches) of a lens. Once the diopter number
is known, other parameters such as magnification power and
total power can be calculated.
Magnification
power is a measure of how much larger an object is
after magnification. A magnification power of 1x means the
object’s size has been increased by 100%. Our 2” object
seen through a lens with a magnification power of 1.5x would
appear to have added 150% on to its original size. So the
2” object will appear through the lens to have increased
in size 3”. Its new size would be 5 inches (2” original
size + 3” increase in size). Since the magnification power
represents 4 times the diopter number, divide diopter by
3 to calculate it. This is the type of power that the Military
Standard uses, but total power is generally used in the
industry.
Total
power, like diopter and magnification power, also
refers to the ability of the lens to increase the size of
a viewed object. However, total power relates the final
size to the original size. Therefore, total power is always
1+ the magnification power. Looking at our 2” wide object
through a magnifier with a total power of 4 would make it
appear 4 x 2” = 8” wide, but its magnification would be
3 x 2” or 6”. Caution: Some people use magnification power
and total power interchangeably. If you’re not sure which
one is being quoted, ask for the focal length or the diopter
value of the lens. Then use the Magnification Chart to determine
the total power.
Focal
length is inversely proportional to diopter. The
stronger the lens, the closer the work must be to the lens
to focus the object. Too large a diopter magnifier may make
it impractical to work under the magnifier. The focal length
can be calculated by dividing the diopter number of the
magnifier into 40. A 3 diopter magnifier would have focal
length of 40/3 = 13.3”. Other considerations in selecting
a magnifier are lens diameter, shape, reach, lighting and
price. In this section, Bertech presents a large selection
of magnifiers with many of these options.
*Industry rates
lenses by total power and not by magnification power. Bertech
has followed that standard in the following pages. Whenever
an “x” appears after a lens number, it refers to total power.
The only exception is that Military Standard S-45743E, DOD-STD-2000-1-B
and WS-6536E call for 4x magnification power (16 diopter)
lenses for inspection of solder joints. This is equivalent
to a 5x total power lens.
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