Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 23:18 22/01/00 -0700, you wrote: >The filter will have an effect on focus but it is not a factor on lenses as >short as 50mm. Dick Gilcreast in his excellent article (LHSA Viewfinder) on >the 135mm Hektor says: > >"The one caveat I should mention in using the Hektor is in the use of >filters with the lens in the rangefinder mount. In common with most other >long lenses, Leica's as well as everybody else's, the glass in the filter >will change the infinity setting very slightly, making the lens focus just a >little beyond infinity at the largest aperatures. It is well to either stop >down to moderate aperatures or use reflex......" Aha. I think maybe in the case of this 50mm lens, dof is so shallow that it might have an effect similar to the above. >Now as I am sure you know, inferred light focuses differently than the >visible spectrum. Leica does not put the generic IF dot on their lenses as >the actual amount of focus shift varies with type of film and filtering >used. They say to test first. The focus would not have to shift much at f1 >for things to go awry, so I suspect this is where your particular problem >came from. >John Collier This is why I specified that it was Infrared Ektachrome- this film is focused normally, unlike some b&w IR films. Using Kodak High Speed Infrared film with a Noctilux would be madness. Utter madness! Unless stopped down so far as to make the maximum aperture of the Noctilux irrelevant. Joe B.