Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/09/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Are Leica's MTFs measured like Zeiss published or calculated, like almost every other manufacturer. The latter is a good way to introduce a lot of bias into your data. Just interested. Note that the 50/1.4 ASPH is not limited by spherical aberrations and has much higher contrast and resolution than the DR at f2. Marty On Fri, Sep 24, 2010 at 5:06 AM, Seth Rosner <sethrosner at nycap.rr.com> wrote: > Scanning the batched conversations I came across this one that caught my > eye > and about which I have some significant knowledge. Some on the list may > recall my writings in LHSA's Viewfinder magazine several years ago > contradicting Erwin Puts' statements about the series of 50/2 Summicrons. > One of them even resulted in marc small accusing me of libel and predicting > that Erwin would sue me. Poor lawyering on marc's part as truth is an > absolute defense to a defamation action. ?;-) > > > > My purpose here is to dispel a very widely held opinion that the 1956 > DR/Rigid 50 Summicron is a low-contrast lens. It is not, except when > compared to the latest Leica and other lenses at wider apertures. Ten years > ago I had correspondence with Lothar Koelsch, then head of lens design at > Leica, about this very issue and received from him print-outs that I have > in > my hands as I write, of the MTF curves calculated by Leitz/Leica Camera, > for > the 50/2 lenses from the Summitar through the DR/Rigid, 11817 (1969) and > the > 1979 version that I believe is still current. > > > > Bear in mind that every lens is a compromise, that there is no such thing > as > a perfect lens. If there were, such a lens would perform flawlessly at full > aperture and as a photographer stopped down, the image would degrade > progressively because of diffraction! So the designer has to decide in > which > direction he/she wishes to correct for most, since one cannot correct all > aberrations simultaneously. The DR/Rigid concedes some softening contrast > at > f/2 and 2,8 in order to correct more highly for spherical and chromatic > aberrations and thus achieve significantly higher resolution. Geoffrey > Crawley, then Editor-in-chief of the British Journal of Photography, > confirmed to me in our correspondence in the late 1960's, that due in some > significant part to the emphasis put upon contrast by the great Japanese > manufacturers, principally Nikon and Canon, that seemed to have persuaded a > large number of photojournalists to favor highest possible contrast (keep > in > mind that most of these folks did then and still do tend to shoot wide open > most often, eh Tina & Ted?), Leitz designed the 1969 50 Summicron #11817, > for max performance at f/2. And wide open, looking at the MTF charts, no > question the contrast of 11817, especially at the lower spatial frequencies > - 5, 10 & 20 line pairs/mm is significantly better than the DR. At f/2,8 it > is better than the DR but only on axis; at the near and far edges the DR's > contrast is superior and at f/4 and 5,6 it is markedly superior, again > except directly on axis. As to the current 50 Summicron, contrast is > somewhat superior at the first three stops whilst the resolution of the DR > at medium apertures is better than both later Summicrons. > > > > >From Leica's own ?MTF charts it is clear that the myth of the DR/Rigid > >lens > being soft and low-contrast is just that - a myth. Use that lens at f/5,6 & > f/8 and even at f/4, and you have an extraordinary image-maker. And using a > rigid 50 on an M8 as I do is even better, since it eliminates the outside > quarter of the image circle wherein lies the vast majority of the design's > "softness". > > > > Just my 2c. > > > > Seth > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >