Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/12/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Good question, but then I was looking in a book about lenses, and I saw the diagrahm of the Hologon 16mm/f8! A wide angle, but what a chuck of glass- the computer designed lens has so much glass in it that there is no room for an aperture/iris! might it have something to do with the film coverage of the lens? All the most wide open lenses, like the Canon f/0.95 and the Leitz f/1 seem to be the prime focal length, or close to it. - -----Original Message----- From: Peterson_Art@hq.navsea.navy.mil <Peterson_Art@hq.navsea.navy.mil> To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Date: Wednesday, December 17, 1997 12:41 PM > > Recent discussion about the use of high-speed wide-angle lenses brings > to mind something I've wondered about for years. The designs of large > aperture lenses generally seem to involve large expanses of glass, all > other things being equal (e.g., the Noctilux), which stands to reason, > at least from my layman's viewpoint. Conversely, in each photographic > format, the designs of moderate wide-angle lenses generally would seem > to permit the minimization of lens size (e.g., for 35mm Leica M series > cameras, the extremely small size of the pre-aspherical 35mm Summicron > and Summilux lenses and the 40mm Summicron-C). Therefore, based on an > assumption that no one would want to tote around a huge chunk of glass > and metal (e.g., the Noctilux) if it weren't necessary, then why is it > that when lens makers design higher speed lenses (going from f/1.4, to > f/1.2, and ultimately to f/1), all of them (e.g., Leica, Nikon, Canon, > Minolta, Olympus, and the rest) do it in the 50mm-to-58mm focal length > range rather than, say, the 35mm-to-40mm focal length range? With any > given maximum aperture, is not a 35mm lens smaller and more convenient > that a 50mm or 58mm lens for the same camera, and so would not a small > (relatively) and convenient 35mm f/1 Noctilux M lens be far preferable > to a larger, heavier, and more conspicuous 50mm f/1 Noctilux? And yet > none exists (or as far as I have ascertained, has ever existed)---why?