Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/11/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>Your interest in this question and the lengths you have gone to answer it >are refreshing. And your assessment of the importance of multicoating to >the pictures we take seems to be justified. Thank you for taking my >question seriously, and answering it. You're welcome. Years ago I worked alongside some microscopy experts who were working on a project to determine why window panes kept falling out of a tall building in the city where I lived. The first hurdle was to work out the intricacies of cutting sections of glass to examine them using electron microscopy. When looking for a sample I asked them if a lens element would do and they thought it was a fine place to start. So they got started on a shattered Leica M 35/2. >So, until recently, lens were liable to being scratched from aggressive >cleaning, but the hard coatings of today will not be scratched by excessive >cleaning? Is that right? Unfortunately, no. Poor cleaning will scratch any lens, but what constitutes poor has changed. Lens coatings have become harder incrementally. Most coatings after 1985 or so are harder than the glass that they cover, but you can still scratch them with over enthusiastic cleaning. One thing to watch out for is to remove large particulate material from the lens before polishing the surface. I photographed some mineral sands processing sites years ago and got zircon dust on several lenses - the Leica ones were okay but some older Nikkors were really scratched up. Lenses of today are less easily scratched than older lenses, but they will still scratch if they are cleaned inappropriately. >Do you have any idea how recent these harder coatings are? The changes in hardness were incremental, but from experience I find that I need to be a lot more careful with anything made before 1985 than after. It varies between manufacturers, with the single coating applied to old Leica lenses (before 1970) among the softest coatings and the newest ones (after 1990) among the very hardest. I am still interested to know how many upgrades in coating technology Leica have applied since, say, 1980, and find it amazing that almost every other high-end lens manyfacturer makes a point of promoting their coatings while Leica does not. They do, of course, tell us that many of their lenses have aspherical elements (while, for instance, Pentax do not) and call several of them 'APO' which, strictly speaking, means "these are well enough corrected across a wide enough range of the spectrum for us at Leica to call them APO". Coatings interest me, 'APO' does not so much. >And I have a question about this comment of yours: "One confounding fact is >that multi-coating is easy to retro-fit, so I am assuming out 35/2 was >multicoated when made, not later on." Did you mean to say, not easy to >retrofit? I meant it as I wrote it. Providing that a lens has no aspherical surfaces and no scratches that go deep enough to scratch the glass, polishing and re-coating is a relatively straightforward undertaking. I am not undermining the skills of John van Stelten and others who offer this service by any means - it is not something that an inexperienced or untrained person can just _do_ but I do know that an engineer with appropriate skills and experience can do it. What I mean is that it is absolutely possible to multi-coat a lens that was not previously multicoated. There was no sign that this was the case with the lens that we looked at, but I am not sure we would have known what to look for to check. On the balance of probabilities, it seems more likely that it was multicoated by Leica when it was made, but the evidence to support this is on weight of evidence, not any empirical fact that says Leica definitely multicoated it. I've seen a 50/2 rigid Summicron that was multicoated recently and it is amazing to see the difference it made when compared to its previous scratched state. I hope this helps, Marty Gallery: http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/freakscene -- Be Yourself @ mail.com! Choose From 200+ Email Addresses Get a Free Account at www.mail.com