Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/09
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike asked: The close-up performance of the AT holds till 1.5 meters. 'APO' is quite often misunderstood in its practical effects. Normally the rays of light that enter the lens are bent under a different angle depending on the wavelength. So a designer must make a choice what colour he/she thinks is most important for practical photography and adjusts his calculations accordingly. Some colours than have larger blurcircles than the corrected colours. Officially this behaviour is documented as colourcircles of differing diameters. The result will be soft fringes at the edges of subject contours. A less well documented effect however is the fact that very small details will become a bit fluffy when they have the colour of the uncorrected spectrum. The apochromatic correction then ensures that even very small details are crisly recorded independent of its spectral composition. There is also some misunderstanding about colour and B&W. Any B&W film will record all colours from the object being photographed, not as colours but as grey shades. So if a lens is well corrected for colour, it is automatically well corrected for greyshades. And the other way around. I do not know of any optical design that is *better* corrected for greyshades than for colour. If you look at the parameters of optical design programs (now and optical calculations in earlier times) you will see that calculations are done with several wavelenghts (mostly five, but some simple designs can work with three colours. Leica now uses seven). Most important here is not the number of colours being used, but their relative weighting in the calculations. So forget about the story that a lens is designed for colour or B&W. All good designs are equally suited for both types. I will do some additional research on Mr Watsons comments. What he notes is crrect. None of this however implies automatically different optical performance. He also notes that the older TE design suffers a bit from corner softness, where the more recent TE should be improved. My exemplar of the older TE however has already impeccable behaviour in the far out corners. I will find mself a most recent TE and check it. It will take me a week to find one. I hope. I do understand the joy of R users that they, with the APO's 2,8/100, 2,8/180 and 4/280 at hand, can easily dwell in optical nirvana. That is BTW one of the raison d'etres of the R-series. Sharing this joy with the M users is great. We M users have better wide angle and standard lenses and better wide aperture optics :-) in the range 21 to 90 mm. Erwin