OK...
Back in high school I had the opportunity in my photography class to make a pinhole camera.
Everyone made one that was the standard 4x5x2-1/2 inches.
I made a zoom.
I made a pinhole camera that had a total overall length of 14 inches with a front that slid back and forth by 6 inches.
I got an A++ for the project.
The Effective aperture size came out to approx F265 if I remember the math correctly.
The image however was also surprisingly sharp. The images were nearly as tack sharp as any 35mm and the edges were good because the image circle actually was larger than the back of the camera.
We used 50 sp. 2x3 film sheet and D76 when we finished up. The tone was spectacular!
I may still have the images and if so ill post them.
Oh and I forgot... The zoom range was approximate to a 600 mm.
Thanks Soocom 1! Your contribution to this thread is very much appreciated. Now we are seeing light at the end of the tunnel in this discussion and my assumptions are right. And we'd like to see some pictures of your pinhole camera if you find them.
So the point was just for someone to confirm that your assumptions were right and ignore anyone who questioned those assumptions?
What is there to question if my assumptions are right?
Lol...
the main point is two fold.
1, the edging being blurry is a direct result of the lack of optics and defraction of light from the pinhole itself.
It is physically impossible to get a perfectly sharp image with any system, but you can get extremely close.
2: The point of the zoom lens aspect is to point out that following only a small given set of rules does not make an entirely specific situation.
Ergo, that the rules set for the example given was only one possible situation.