Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/12/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The more blades, the more round - no, it depends on the shape, the position of the blades, and the opening (f-stop). The Summar has 12 blades (2 times 6), which form a hexagon between f 2.2 and 12.5; the Summitar (10) shows an almost perfect circle at f 2.8 (or short before 3.2) and almost a circle before or after. The rigid chrome Summicron (10) shows the circle at f 16, both my coll. Summicrons (10) between f 2 and 2.8, and the Summarit (15) or 73 mm Hektor (15) at all f-stops, with the circle being "more perfect" in the Summarit. Besides, my post-war 1.5/50 Zeiss Sonnar (11 blades) shows the almost perfect circle between f 1.5 and 2. The 10 blades of both the Summitar or Summicron (coll, rig chrome) show a more perfect circle than the Sonnar's 11 blades. So, when you take a high contrast picture (sun or it's reflections shining into the lens) at i.e. f 16, even the coll or rigid chrome Summicron show different results, because the rigid has the iris circle at f 16 and the collapsibles between f 2 and 2.8. Of course the shape of the "rays" depends on the space between the single blades also ... :) Alf At 21:11 17.12.1997 -0500, Dan Post wrote: >Interesting- I had heard that the greater the number, the rounder the >aperture and hence somewhat better image formation ( diffraction?).