Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/03/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Walt, This is essentially the same argument I used with myself when I was deciding between the 35cron and the 35lux. I was never good enough to focus at 1.4...so when I had an f/1.4 lens in the past, I'd be trying desperately to stop down to f/2 in even the dimmest light. Therefore it seemed like wasted money and weight (for me and my limited abilities). Of course, my experience at that point was limited to SLRs...now I think I might do a better job with a rangefinder. Perhaps when I can afford the 35luxAsph I'll consider it. Best, Aaron >Hi: > >I'm just curious what the fuss is all about concerning the Noctilux. Big, >pricey and seemingly flawed. The difference between 1.4 and 1.0 cannot be >worth the sacrifice in quality, is it? Just about the only advantage a >Leica had over the SLRS (size, weight, unobtrusiveness) of its day would >seem to be given up. > >Many times over the years I've given up an f stop or two for excellent >performance and portability. When covering an event where long,fast glass >was needed then the bulky monsters were necessary. Other than that I could >never justify it. There have been many fine images shown on the LUG by >folks with a Noctilux but were any done in situations where a 1.4 or even >a 2.0 would have not done the trick? > >Maybe that should be one of the next "shadow" type entertainments posted >here? Are fuzzy aberrations worth the price? Lets do f 1, 1.4, or 2.0 and >be there??? > >Walt