Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]arative performance of Leica lenses is arguably the most popular theme on the Lug and elsewhere in our universe. The question is mostly posed in general terms: how does lens A compare to lens B. The character of any Leica lens however defies such an easy inquiry. First of all: a Leica lens has a personality of characteristics and an optical fingerprint that defines its imagery that is not very easy to describe. Secondly: in optical science it is not customary and in fact is considered as wrong to try to compare lenses with different focal lengths. The characteristics, the parameters and the residual aberration content are so different that a comparison between a 90 and a 135mm lens is at best inconclusive and at worst meaningless. When one wishes to restrict the comparison to lenses with the same focal length, we should first consider the many aspects that go into a meaningful analysis of lens performance. Full aperture: overall contrast, flare, veiling glare and ghost images, the rendition of fine detail on axis and in the field and in several zones up to the extreme corners, the capabilities of this lens at this aperture for the rendition of finer levels of detail rendition. What is the finest possible detail that this lens can capture with a certain level of contrast. Level of vignetting and sharpness/unsharpness gradient. The performance of the lens when stopping down. How fast does the image quality improve and to what extent and where in the image field (axis and/or field and/or corners). When is the optimum performance reached, how does the image degrade when stopping because of diffraction after f/8. Close-up performance at all apertures is an additional topic. As is color reproduction. As is shadow and highlight separation of details etc. This list is not exhaustive, just indicative. Given this amount of information that has to analyzed numerically in strictly controlled conditions and should be evaluated in user-related terminology, any simple conclusion about the performance of a lens does not justify the efforts of the lens designers and will not be helpful for anyone who wishes to make a considered buying decision. Visit my Leica FAQ for more info about these topics. Erwin