Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/01/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Aspherics in the Leica line are of two types. Glass elements that are grinded by CNC machinery. This machinery has been developed by an independent commercial manufacturer who developed the instrument in coopertaion with Leica, but are free to sell it to anyone. Same arrangement goes for Leica developed glass that is now in the regular catalogues of Schott and Corning. Glass elements that can be heated and then pressed into shape by ceramic moulds. Only a few glasses can survive this technique. All glass of this type is from Hoya. Zeiss uses the same technique with glass from the same glass supplier. The aspherics technology is not new. The idea of using aspherical glass for corecting aberrations has been proposed by Huygens (18th century scholar). The first practical application came around 1930. It is not the machinery that is important but the computation of the curvature of the glass AND the creativity of the designer to know what he/she is doing. Production technology should be closely tied to optical design. It makes no sense to talk about lens designs and which lens is a derivative of another one. Being very strict only a few types exist and all the rest are variants thereof. Anyone ever noticed that almost all Japanese 50mm lenses are close copies of the Planar type. Still their performance differ widely. Any designer would be foolish to try to dvelop a totally new design. Everyone builds on proven designs. Erwin