Hello,
Preface:
I am currently doing my film digitization with a D850, a PB-6 Bellows and film holder, and for a lens, a lens designed specifically for duping film, the Rodenstock APO-Rodagon D 75mm f/4.
The light source is a diffused 5600˚K PRL Lighting Lustra L50 LED array (unlike cheap LED arrays, the L50 is a cine grade light and has both excellent color spectrum and brightness). I have the entire rig mounted on a Really Right Stuff CB-18 Camera Bar which in turn is mounted on my most solid tripod and head combination, an old Gitzo 410 C with a Foba ASMIA head. I focus using live view at 1:1.
I create custom profiles for my cameras using an X-rite ColorChecker Digital SG target and BasICColor Input 5 software.
I have found that I get the best, most film like results by bracketing my exposures (-1, 0, +1) and, when processing the NEFs in Lightroom CC Classic, using Timothy Armes ENFUSE Lightroom plug-in. It is counter-intuitive (to me at least) but by bracketing and use of the ENFUSE plug-in does a great job of reducing the both the inherent contrast, tone curve, and grainy appearance of duped or digitized film.
I ask about the 3:1 range as I sometimes need greater resolution than a single D850 frame provides so I increase the magnification ratio by focusing closer and use the x/y movements of the PB-6 film stage to photograph the film in overlapping quadrants. This yields an image that is roughly (I don't have an image open on the computer right now so the exact numbers are not at hand) in the 80-100mp range.
The problem is that with this lens at that magnification I am working at the physical limitations of the bellows unit. I know there is an extension rail for the PB-6 ( the PB-6E) but it is super-expensive and will make my setup much larger.
The question (finally):
Do any of shorter focal length F- mount Micro-Nikkors yield equivalent performance to the APO-Rodagon D 75mm f/4?