Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My first Leica experience was with an M2 and 35 Summicron pre. asph. - the quintessential Leica combination in terms of weight, size and handling, and one to which my hands always seem to want to return. If there is one flaw in the current development of the M it has to be the increasing size of the lenses. The 35 Summilux Asph is a fantastic lens, and one that I always use when I am sure that I will need its wide open performance, but I hardly ever feel like taking it with me when the photography is going to be more opportunistic and unplanned - it's just too big. This week I found, and bought, a Nikon SP. I was very curious, and this one was just about affordable. I was pleasantly surprised to find that with its 50/1.4 the SP is almost exactly the same size as an M2 with the old 35 Summicron and (on the kitchen scales) weighs an identical 720 grammes. The finder is a similar magnification to the M3 so this combination makes a very nice low light 50mm combination. The Nikkor 50/1.4 lens is positively tiny - I'm looking forward to seeing how it performs. Does anybody have experience of the lens - in Nikon or Leica mount? The M2/3/4/6 with old 35 'cron or 'lux is Leica's magic size and weight - it's no surprise that they choose to show the M6 with collapsed 50/2.8 rather than any of the other lenses next to an egg in the new brochure. If Erwin is correct in his view that the current lenses are more than a match for current film technology then maybe Leica could aim for greater compactness and ease of handling (not to mention less viewfinder intrusion) in the next generation of lenses. Simon Pulman-Jones, London.