Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/03/31
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 06:02 PM 3/30/98 -0800, Adam wrote: >I am not familiar with "Kingslake's analysis of the design". What is it? > >And you would argue, I suppose, the the Soviets were in a better moral position, >war booty and all that. > >The Soviets, on the other hand just kept churning out the same designs.... >Maybe some minor improvements on the wide angle side. Rudolph Kingslake is the retired head of photographic design at Kodak and his books, especially A HISTORY OF THE PHOTOGRAPHIC LENS, are most strongly recommended. The Soviets received machinery and designs from the Zeiss plant at Jena and from the Zeiss Ikon works at Dresden by the agreement of the Allied Control Commission. That is, this was an agreed-upon part of the reparations Germany paid to the USSR. The Canon and Nikon thefts were just that and are, as such, completely indefensible. Finally, the Soviets have been most innovative in optical design and development. Among other innovations are the first commercially successful catadioptric lenses (the 8/500 and 10/1000 MTO's, introduced at the Brussels World Fair in '58), the extremely fine 1.5/85 Helios (dating from 1957), the "Fotosnaiper" series of telephotography equipment, and the 5.6/20 Russar MR-2 and the 6/28 Orion-15 low-cost, high-quality wide-angles for rangefinder cameras. Their native optical industry is of the first water, though 'Soviet' economics tended to render the results of most erratic quality. Marc msmall@roanoke.infi.net FAX: +540/343-7315 Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir!