Thanks for helping me work this out!
I'd like to briefly step back and summarize/acknowledge that:
- I don't know much about optics but I'm impatiently waiting for a copy of Light: Science and Magic that is taking a long time for delivery. So though I may miss some of the finer points here now I'll come back later to understand fully.
- There are a lot of variables affecting picture quality: microscope head, objective lenses, auxilliary lenses, optical splitter for the trinocular ports, camera sensor, etc and I may not be considering the right one(s).
- I am mostly wondering where is the lowest hanging fruit: what could I do to get sharper images, less sensitivity to low light, better depth of field, etc?
So with that out of the way let's get back into this.
Otherwise the best microscope camera is the blue square / cube shaped ones. Which have the sony IMX290 sensor in them.
This is actually what I am using now: the Eakins autofocus camera with IMX290 sensor that Dave reviewed. However, I'm not using it with an inspection scope but rather on the camera port of an Eakins (~AmScope) trinocular microscope. So my setup is like Steve Gardner here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xs67D1t16wA.Earlier in the thread I found that I need a 1/3 reducer lens to have a suitable field of view on this microscope. The camera then sees approximately the rectangle contained by the circles I see through the eye pieces i.e. crops out the round bits around the edges.
Generally the view through the eye pieces is very bright - brighter than I would ideally like - while the camera can only /just/ get a proper picture without using ISO gain. So it seems like somehow less light is coming to the camera lens than to my eyes and I don't know if that's down to the reducer lens (indirectly a mismatched camera sensor size?) or due to the ratio of the optical splitter in the microscope head (unspecified, didn't get a straight answer from Eakins) or...
Any ideas? (Am I expressing myself clearly?)