Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/10/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > There is more, much more to lens design then just bending light. There > > are so many different designs allieds,triplets,symmetrical and so on. > > The main difference is the attitude of the company itself. The > > Japanese (at least in 35mm) tend to build there lenses to the market > > and spend very little in Yen on there raw material (glass). Zeiss and > > Leitz tend to build there lenses to a certain high criteria. They pay > > a large amount of Marks for there raw material (high refractive index > > glass). After spending all this money they then decide what the price > > will be. David Morton wrote: > This just isn't true, you can count the number of manufacturers of high > refractive index and other specialist glasses on the fingers of one > mitten, and the German lens manufacturers use the same sources as > everyone else. Nikon in particular have been innovative in their use of > such materials in their 'serious' lens designs (though I accept that > these days they make a lot of price-driven crap). Sorry David, but I've got to disagree with you. Japanese companies design and manufacture lenses for specific parts (amateur/pro) of the market. They decide what kind of lens to make and then set a price for that lens. Leica reverses this, they make a lens and after that they calculate the price. Japanese companies work this way because they have compete with each other. Erwin Puts, a Dutch Leica specialist put it this way: Nikon competes with Canon, Minolta competes with Pentax, but Leica competes with Leica. Bert