Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/12/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Philippe, I asked a similar Q way back when since there IS a slight difference in distance when you focus and reframe, however small. Among other people, uncle Ted basically answered that "just focus and shoot and don't worry about it." So I just focus and shoot and not worry about it. In my experience of shooting a lot at F1.4 to F2, any focusing error is mine. Some times due to the lighting and the patch is not as clear as it can be or fast motion, I know I am "guessing" a bit and those are the ones where the focus may be slightly off. When I think I nail the focus, then it does seem that way. I use. the .72x VF and although I have the 90/2AA, 95% of my shots are the 35/50 combo. My eyesight is not the greatest and while I don't need glasses to drive, I definitely need reading glasses to read anything "small." :-( FWIW At 08:21 AM 12/30/2004, Philippe Orlent wrote: >Dear Luggers, > >I have been shooting a lot with this lens lately (serial #3166XXX), both on >Agfa Scala and on Kodak BW400CN. Whilst scanning I discovered that a lot of >my shots are not tack sharp when taken wide open at f2. > >Could this be due to the fact that I tend to focus and then reframe (in >portraits f.i.)? In other words, is this lens known to be sharp in center, >but slightly off focus at the edges (+ also slight vignetting)? > >Or is this due to the narrow DOF when wide open: a difference of an inch or >so after reframing, resulting in not being razorsharp? > >Ofcourse it could also be that my RF isn't set accurately, but I doubt this, >since the camera was CLAd 2 months ago by one of the few technicians left in >my area that know how to handle these beauties. > >I'm slightly short sighted (-0.5 dioptry), but I also doubt that this has >any affect on focusing accurately at about 1 to 2 metres. // richard (This email is for mailing lists. To reach me directly, please use richard at imagecraft.com)