Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Morning! What John Gong had to say about his experience with Jim Brick's earlier owned 24mm R rang true to me as all too rare on the LUG, its substance turning on pilot error. The results different users get with a particular lens, if it is manufactured within given tolerances turn a lot more on how the lens is used than the lens itself. There may be wider than normal variance in examples of the 24mm R. In fact, it probably is a combination of various things, but John's comment made me wonder if the shortcomings attributed to the 24mm R may in truth be more driven by a precise "sweet spot" of ultimate sharpness being disguised to some users eyes by the inherently deeper-seeming DOF of wide angle lenses. I think John's candor in acknowledging that pilot error may be more to blame than the lens itself is enlightened and enlightening. It's a damned poor carpenter who blames his tools, and when the tools are Leica tools, poorer carpenters, indeed! Now as long as we're considering the remote possibility of photographer error, let me jump to confess that after lots of trying with the 80mm R, I could never consistently put the focus plane where I wanted it. Some rolls would come back with hilariously misplaced planes of focus. One by one revealing that while there was indeed a razor sharp focus plane, and beaucoup bokeh, often nowhere near I intended it. I got it right between a third and half the time! There were even shots that turned out interesting, but fully unintentional in terms of what I had attempted to do. Compliments about the unintended focus plane in a particular photograph made it worse! Now, I continued to struggle with it, because I loved the idea of a lens of that length and speed. I didn't trade it in until the front lens element unit came off the rest of the lens while using it. My dealer's re-threading it and turning his back to me while he strained to snug it up didn't do much confidence inspiring, either. But in fact, I gave up on the lens because its plane of sharp focus was beyond my capacity to control with predictable results as recorded on film. "This is your pilot speaking; We may be encountering areas of rough focus, I ask that you now put on your focusbelts and leave them until the focusbelt light goes out." Enjoy the light. Greg