Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1995/02/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>From: Jeffrey Frey <jeff@eng.umd.edu> >Date: Sun, 5 Feb 1995 17:32:01 -0500 >To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us >Subject: Summicron formulas > >A guy I've been corresponding with on rec.photo.advanced has said that "some >Japanese" believe that the formula for the original 50/2 rigid Summicron was >different than that for the 50/2 collapsible Summicron (made at the same time) and is, in fact, much superior. Does anyone know if part or all of this >statement is true? > >Jeff I read in three books published in Japan that the rigid Summicron 50/2 used a formula different from that for the collapsible Summicron 50/2. Both are of 6-group-7-element design, but the drawings of the two versions clearly look different. My own question is whether there was *only one* formula for the rigid Summicron 50/2, or more than one. The author of one of the books I mentioned states ``It seems the formula of the Summicron 50/2 was changed several times without any announcement from Leitz." (He is talking about what we know as ``the(?!)'' first generation 6-group-7-element Summicron 50/2 lenses, not the later ones.) I don't know if ``several times'' is really true. Can anyone help? Another question: There was a period when Leitz produced both the rigid Summicron 50/2 and the collapsible Summicron 50/2. I am tempted to believe that each had its own formula at that time, which means that the two formulas overlapped in time. Any idea? Yet another question: Do the rigid Summicrion 50/2 lenses have *identical* formula as the near-range Summicrion 50/2 lenses from the same period? That is, is the focusing mechanism the *only* difference between the near-range lenses and the rigid ones? I don't know if the newer design is ``much superior.'' I tend to think that each has its own character. Has anyone tried both? Thanks for reading. --Ichiro PS: I am a Japanese, but that is just a coincidence. :-)