Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Some people indicated their curiosity about Planar and Summicron performance: At full aperture the Planar-T shows very limited light falloff (slightly less than theLeica Summicron ASPH), gives a high contrast image over most of the image-area, with the corners falling back a little. Microcontrast is medium, giving softer edges on large objects and the very fine details are not as crisply rendered as the Summicron ASPH. Extremely fine details, that are within the recording capabilities of the Summicron are lost in the Planar-T image. At f/2,8 the microcontrast becomes higher and now the very fine details are quite sharp and finely delineated. At f/4,0 the aforementioned extremely fine detail is now visible in the Planar-T image. From f/11,0 the image quality, especially the contrast drops a little. Flatness of field is is not as well corrected as with the Summicron ASPH. At a distance of ± 10metres the Planar-T images become generally softer and the micro contrast is very low now. Very fine image details are still visible, but the edges are soft and image lines are weak. This performance I would not attribute to the lens. The excellent performance at ± 3,5 metres would give the Planar-T very high marks. I would suggest that we are finding the limits of the AF system in these circumstances. And it gives credit to the position of Leica that a large base mechanical rangefinder is necessary for very critical work. In itself the Planar-T is a very competent lens, and from f/4,0 I would rate it equal to the Summicron-M ASPH. Study of the MTF graphs of both lenses corroborates the analysis given above. The two stops more in ultimate performance of the Summicron ASPH and the greater accuracy of the M-rangefinder justify the M-6/ASPH35 combination Erwin