Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]- --============_-1278326735==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed" At f/2.8 the Hexanon has much improved imagery and now has a high contrast image on axis with a crisp rendering of very fine detail over an image area of 8mm. The rapid falloff in quality in the field and outer zones is still there to be seen by critical inspection, but now fine detail is quite clearly visible with some fuzziness at the edges. At f/5.6 the improvements continue and now the center area has grown to 12mm diameter, covering a large part of the negative area. The outer zones stay a bit soft. Very fine detail is now easily recorded. At f/11 the maximum is reached and now exceedingly fine detail is clearly resolved with medium to high contrast. The Hexanon produces imagery, reminiscent to classical lenses of the golden age of lens design for RF cameras when on axis performance was paramount and the outer zones had to be a bit neglected, given the state of the art of design in those days. It will produce high contrast images with a crisp rendering of fine detail in the center of the image. The rapid drop of performance beyond this circle can in most situations be neglected as it will be located in the out-of-focus unsharpness zones anyway. The Noctilux 1.0/50mm at f/1.0 (full aperture) is of slightly lower contrast than the Hexanon at 1,2. The on axis performance of the Noct extends over a slightly larger circle and very fine detail is recorded with a bit more edge sharpness. At f1.0 the Noctilux imagery overall is slightly ahead of the Hexanon. One might call it a photo-finish. At f1.2 the Noctilux forges ahead and especially the fine details are recorded with more crispness. The Noctilux has the same characteristic as the hexanon in that the image quality drops fairly rapidly when going from center to corners. The Noctilux has a smoother gradient and the fall off in performance is more gentle. The Noctilux however has a slightly higher level of vignetting than the Hexanon. The Noctilux at f1.4 improves quite a bit (the on axis area shows quite crisp rendition of fine detail over a circle of about 9mm) and high contrast, As this is the 'real' aperture to compare the Hexanon 1,2/60 with, the Noctilux is now visibly ahead of the Hexanon at f/1,2. It is very interesting to compare these two lenses as they show to what level aberrations of very high speed lenses need to be corrected for good imagery in their intended area of applications. The Noctilux is 'optically' a full stop wider than the Hexanon and it is quite a performance that the Noctilux can show off the Hexanon, albeit with a small margin, while wrestling with a much higher aberration content. On its own the Hexanon at f/1,2 is an admirable performer and shows that small concessions in speed and angle of view can circumvent the big challenge. Erwin - --============_-1278326735==_ma============ Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii" <fontfamily><param>Arial</param>At f/2.8 the Hexanon has much improved imagery and now has a high contrast image on axis with a crisp rendering of very fine detail over an image area of 8mm. The rapid falloff in quality in the field and outer zones is still there to be seen by critical inspection, but now fine detail is quite clearly visible with some fuzziness at the edges. At f/5.6 the improvements continue and now the center area has grown to 12mm diameter, covering a large part of the negative area. The outer zones stay a bit soft. Very fine detail is now easily recorded. At f/11 the maximum is reached and now exceedingly fine detail is clearly resolved with medium to high contrast. The Hexanon produces imagery, reminiscent to classical lenses of the golden age of lens design for RF cameras when on axis performance was paramount and the outer zones had to be a bit neglected, given the state of the art of design in those days. It will produce high contrast images with a crisp rendering of fine detail in the center of the image. The rapid drop of performance beyond this circle can in most situations be neglected as it will be located in the out-of-focus unsharpness zones anyway. The Noctilux 1.0/50mm at f/1.0 (full aperture) is of slightly lower contrast than the Hexanon at 1,2. The on axis performance of the Noct extends over a slightly larger circle and very fine detail is recorded with a bit more edge sharpness. At f1.0 the Noctilux imagery overall is slightly ahead of the Hexanon. One might call it a photo-finish. At f1.2 the Noctilux forges ahead and especially the fine details are recorded with more crispness. The Noctilux has the same characteristic as the hexanon in that the image quality drops fairly rapidly when going from center to corners. The Noctilux has a smoother gradient and the fall off in performance is more gentle. The Noctilux however has a slightly higher level of vignetting than the Hexanon. The Noctilux at f1.4 improves quite a bit (the on axis area shows quite crisp rendition of fine detail over a circle of about 9mm) and high contrast, As this is the 'real' aperture to compare the Hexanon 1,2/60 with, the Noctilux is now visibly ahead of the Hexanon at f/1,2. It is very interesting to compare these two lenses as they show to what level aberrations of very high speed lenses need to be corrected for good imagery in their intended area of applications. The Noctilux is 'optically' a full stop wider than the Hexanon and it is quite a performance that the Noctilux can show off the Hexanon, albeit with a small margin, while wrestling with a much higher aberration content. On its own the Hexanon at f/1,2 is an admirable performer and shows that small concessions in speed and angle of view can circumvent the big challenge. Erwin </fontfamily> - --============_-1278326735==_ma============--