Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/04/05

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Subject: [Leica] 180/f2.8 & Infinity focus
From: marcsmall at comcast.net (Marc James Small)
Date: Sun, 05 Apr 2009 23:26:12 -0400
References: <17336394.1238987096138.JavaMail.root@elwamui-hybrid.atl.sa.earthlink.net>

Someone referred to this 2.8/180 as a "long 
telephoto lens".  It is important to bear in mind 
that other views do not see such a lens in this 
category.  The late Theo Kisselbach, one of the 
fathers of the Leica system in its salad days 
once referred to the 4.5/20cm Telyt of the era as 
a "moderately long lens", and stated that he 
preferred the term LONG focus for lenses beyond 30cm in focal length.

Leitz was slow to adopt the telephoto format.  A 
telephoto lens is a lens with a compressed 
optical path:  it is physically shorter than its 
focal length.  Zeiss loved the idea but, then, 
Zeiss had a huge design department and a lot of 
researchers to work out the best formulae.  Leitz 
was much smaller and had much leaner resources, 
so they stuck with long-focus lenses:  a 40cm 
Telyt ran out to 40cm (roughly 16 inches) from 
the film plane.  This has changed in recent years 
(the past four decades or so) as Leitz/Leica has 
enjoyed the fruits of its early investment in computer-aided design.

I tend to agree with Kisselbach.  A 180 lens is a 
daily user.  The longer stuff such as that 40cm 
Telyt, is for special occasions.

Marc


msmall at aya.yale.edu
Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!



In reply to: Message from wildlightphoto at earthlink.net (Doug Herr) ([Leica] 180/f2.8 & Infinity focus)