Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/10/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>There is a difference, Bokeh or whatever, and I have difficulty in >understanding that it cannot be defined and/or measured. Once you know what >it is, the optical designer should be able to engineer it back into future >designs. Gerard, It's tempting to make comparisons with audio equipment design. Especially during the "monster amp" days of the 1970s, a lot of companies made equipment whose main design goal was to test well. The component with the lowest distortion figures isn't necessarily the one that reproduces music the best, but if you make your decision based only on the test report charts, this is the one you will buy. It's been a long time since I have paid attention to the audiophile world, but if I remember, you can't hear some kinds of distortion when levels are below about 2 percent. Manufacturers were fighting over levels in the 0.005 range. Very low distorition figures became a fetish with people who were into the tech end of the hobby. One way to dramatically reduce distortion is to use large ammounts of negative feedback. This uses a circuit which feeds an amplifier's own distortion components back into the amplifier with reversed polarity. This negative signal cancels out and conceals most of the amp's distortion artifacts. This can seriously degrade performance, but boy, will it look good in certain tests--which is more important than reproducing music well. In Dennis Laney's _Leica Lens Practice_ book, he describes the methods that Leica uses to test their own lenses. He claims in his book that the tests done by most magazines don't do the battery of tests necessary to get the whole picture (pun intended), because they are expensive, time consuming and difficult. Although I don't know much about optical design, I found the way that the graphs show the _balance_ of lens characteristics to be very interesting. The emphasis was on balance, not an obsession with doing well in a few, essy-to-measure areas. There are a lot of tradeoffs that can be made in different areas. It would, of course, be possible to design the lens so that it excelled in magazine lens tests, but at the expense of more subtle characteristics which are difficult to measure. If you are taking a test in school, and you know the questions in advance, and you memorize the answers, the results of the test don't accurately reflect what you know. - - Paul