Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/06/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Henning, Thanks for the comparison. Your suggestion is precisely what I was thinking and I'm glad to have someone second it. The Nokton and the Summicron seem like they would be a great combo! Frank - -------Original Message------- From: Henning Wulff <henningw@archiphoto.com> Sent: 06/10/03 01:36 AM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: [Leica] 35/1.2 Nokton re: 35/1.4 Summilux > > I recently had a chance to use Tom Abrahamsson's Nokton 35 for a week, and did some comparisons with my 35/1.4 Summilux ASPH, and, to a lesser degree, my fourth generation Summicron 35. The Nokton is huge; closer to the Noctilux in size than the Summilux. The Nokton isn't quite as dense as the Summilux, so it only weighs 490gms (compared to the Summilux at 310gms). The Nokton's front glass sits further away from the camera than the Noctilux's, but isn't recessed as far, so you have to use the Nokton's hood. The lens seems to intrude more into the viewfinder than my v.2 Noctilux; mostly due to the wider angle of view, but also due to the greater extension from the camera of the lens plus hood. The build quality is very good; definitely the best of any C-V product to date. It focusses to 0.7m in a reasonably short throw, and the movement is as smooth as you could want. The buld quality still seems a little shy of that of the Summilux, but not as much as the price difference. I shot a number of B&W Delta 100 films and a number of Kodak 100 Elite; also one of Fuji Velvia, which I respect for it's high resolution but generally dislike for its lack of shadow detail and harsh tones. The one thing that amazed me about the Nokton's performance is that the lens is exactly the same at f/1.2 as at f/8. Same resolution, same contrast. Only the light falloff is less at f/8. And the light falloff at f/1.2 isn't bad. At f/1.4 the light falloff seems identical to that of the Summilux. At f/1.2 the resolution and contrast of the Nokton seemed identical to that of the Summilux at f/1.4. I truly could not tell the images apart. The only thing is that in certain conditions the level of flare produced by the Nokton seemed to be very slightly less. For wide open shooting, in the very worst lighting conditions, the Nokton excels, and seems to be at least as good as the Summilux. When the lenses were stopped down, the story differs. When the Nokton is stopped down, the images look identical to those at f/1.2, except the last vestiges of light falloff disappear. Resolution and contrast remain the same, and are only slightly different identical center to edge. The Summilux images, however, improve so that at f/2.8 and above they are significantly crisper due to both resolution and contrast improvements. I alway thought that the Summilux was one of those lenses that improved hardly at all, and that you could shoot them at any aperture with essentially equal results. Now I have used a lens that seems to be truly equal at all apertures. Another facet of performance is that at f/1.2 the Nokton seems to have even less astigmatism than the Summilux, even though it it virtually unnoticeable in the latter. Bokeh seems to be virtually identical; probably due to the high correction of both of the lenses. Lack of spherical aberration produces a bit of harshness in both lenses, with the Nokton possibly suffering a bit more of this than the Summilux. What this means is that the Nokton is not a universal lens; even less than the Noctilux. When there is sufficient light, you do want a lens that will image a superbly resolved, high contrast picture, that is better than what the Nokton can achieve at f/1.2. The solution, it seems to me, is to get the Nokton for f/1.2 to f/2, and get the Summicron (4th gen) for all those times that f/2.8 and above and a miniscule lens are just the ticket. I'm not getting a Nokton (at least right now) because the extra 1/2 stop (works out to 1/3 in practice) isn't enough reason to carry such a huge lens and spend such a lot of money. However, if you don't have a Summilux right now, it (and an old Summicron) might be just the ticket. - -- * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw@archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html > - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html