Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/01/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I had one briefly but know little more about it now than I did then. In Van Haesbroek's book, 'Leica, A History Covering Every blah blah blah' it suggests it comes from a time B.L.C. (before Leica camera) and was announced in 1902. It was one of the earliest lenses manufactuered by Leitz. The firm made microphotographic cameras from the 1880s of 13x18cm format. I suspect it would cover that. Jem - -----Original Message----- From: Rob McElroy [SMTP:idag@pce.net] Anyone have any experience with or knowledge about the 12cm f4.5 Summar lens? It is a screw mount lens with 32.5mm mounting thread diameter. It is shown mounted on an Ibsor shutter, on page 128 of Lager's Lenses book. I bought one today at a price I couldn't pass up, but know little about it other than it was used for close-up photography. Here's my barrage of questions. I would like to know what format the lens was designed to cover, if it has a flat image plane, what reproduction range it was designed for, how its resolution and contrast measure up to the best comparable lenses, when it was in production, why was production stopped, did it become the Photar, was it part of the Leicaphot system? Can anyone point me to some Leitz literature that might describe it? Any and all responses are welcome. Thanks, Rob McElroy Buffalo, NY