Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Might I suggest a test for those who are concerned about the focus of their lenses and rangefinders? I put a yardstick on my desk, with a pencil pointing to any specific point near the middle, then shoot a test shot of the yardstick, from one end, from any distance, at a relatively wide opening, while focusing on the point where the pencil is pointed. This is pretty easy, because the two images in the rangefinder form an X, which you can move up and down the yardstick by focusing the lens, until the center is right at the pencil-indicated spot. When you develop the film you can then use a magnifier to assure yourself that the lens has focused where you intended--the numbers on the yardstick drift in and out of focus through the focused-on area in a way that's very easy to see exactly what's going on. This is a much more telling test than just popping off a shot at infinity, because you can actually *see* the zone and placement of focus. Of course, for this to work, YOU have to have good enough eyes to focus the camera correctly :-) When testing this, I try to use a distance that's meaningful for the kind of photos I do (which are almost never at infinity, anyway). The results and solution can be discouraging. First, there's the ideal distance from the lens flange to the film, hopefully set at the factory (WAY off on my IIIA, which I intend to fix when I get around to it); if you're using LTM lenses on M cameras there's the thickness of the adapter (more below); there's the calibration of the lens; the calibration of the camera rangefinder. There's also the mis-match of the mount to the optics (remember those tiny little numbers near the infinity mark on some Leitz lenses?). I have one lens (non-Leitz) which is hopeless in this respect--fine at infinity, terrible at three feet, progressively worse through the range between. I have four LTM-M adapters. Three are new, and measure .96mm thick, one is Leitz, measuring 1.04mm. I don't know if 1.00mm is ideal, but at least there's a .08mm variation in this group. That means a lot to a wide-angle lens (somehow that idea of greater depth-of-field makes sense to me only until I start looking closely--with a W/A it's not really greater--it's just harder to see the problems because they're smaller--my 15mm Heliar really doesn't have that much DOF, when it comes right down to it!). After a little playing around, I think I've got everyone paired up with his right partner. I have one lens which is still a problem, and a fix was attempted by a name you all know. Suffice it to say the fix was crude, poorly done, and I'll probably re-do it sometime, better, leading me to comment that I think there's work out there for people who want to learn to fix things right (But that's a topic for another thread. . .) --Michael Darnton ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com