Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dear LUGGERS, From the archives May 31, 2000 Doug Richardson tells all: Howard. >If you use a "Voigtlander" Bessa or Konica Hexar, and fit only the >company’s own lenses or modern Leica lenses, you may cheerfully ignore >this posting. However, if you like experimenting with older Leitz and >non-Leitz lenses on your camera, read on. > >It’s tempting to assume that any lens which will fit a Leica will also >fit the Japanese-built Bessa and Hexar cameras, but this it not always >the case. > >A few days ago Howard Cummer was passing through London, and wanted to >try some of my older Leitz and non-Leitz screw-mount lenses on his >rangefinder Bessa. > >Howard was interested in trying my KMZ 20mm f5.6 Russar, but found >that the protruding rear section if this lens fouled on the internal >structure of the Bessa, preventing it from being screwed home. > >The was a simple problem whose after-effects can be removed by the >application of a little matt black paint to the metalwork which had >made inadvertent contact, but a more complex problem emerged when >Howard tried my 5.8cm f1.5 Leica-Sonnar. (This is a lens which the >average Bessa or Hexar user is very unlikely to meet, but it’s >possible that other oddball lenses might have the same problem.) > >The lens would not unscrew from his camera, but would turn only a few >degrees anticlockwise before sticking! > >Reasoning that the problem might be due to the rangefinder cam, I >focussed the lens to its shortest distance, and was then able to >unscrew it. Looking at the rear of the lens, it soon become clear what >the problem was. > >While a traditional Leica lens has a cam whose rear face lies parallel >to the rear if the mount, and which moves in and out to couple to the >rangefinder, the cam on the Leica-Sonnar and the 40mm Summicron-C for >the CL Summicron-C (and presumably the 90mm C lens) has a sloped >rangefinder cam which achieves its effect by a combination of moving >in and out and by turning to bring a higher or lower section of the >cam against the rangefinder sensing roller. > >When a lens set to infinity, the cam is as far rearward (i.e. deep >into the camera body) as it will go, and the position of the >rangefinder roller is thus as deep into the body as it needs to go. As >the lens is refocussed to shorter distances, the cam retracts into the >lens, and the rangefinder roller moves forward > >On the 40mm Summicron-C, turning the lens mount from infinity to >closer range not only retracts the cam into the body of the lens, but >also brings a lower point of the cam into contact with the rangefinder >roller. The slope of the cam thus increases the effect of the cam >retraction. On the 5.8cm Leica-Sonnar the slope works in opposition to >the cam retraction. Turning the lens mount from infinity to closer >range retracts the cam into the body of the lens, but brings a higher >point of the cam into contact with the rangefinder roller. > >The problem with the latter scheme is that when the lens is set to >infinity (and the rangefinder roller is as far back into the camera >body as it needs to go), other parts of the cam penetrate even deeper >into the body. So if a lens of this type is to be screwed into and out >of the camera body while set to infinity, the rangefinder roller must >be able to move a further 2mm into the body in order to ride up and >over the highest point of the cam. > >On a screw-mount or M Leica, the rangefinder mechanism can cope with >this extra movement, but it seems that the Bessa rangefinder will not. > >Like many screw-mount enthusiasts, Howard sets a lens to its shortest >distance before fitting it to the camera. Before trying to remove the >lens, he’d refocussed it to infinity, and the rangefinder roller had >been unable to cope with the highest point of the cam, so prevented >the lens being turned further. > >At this point Konica Hexar users are probably saying to themselves, >"My camera has a bayonet mount, so I’d have no problem, even if it >turns out that the Hexar rangefinder roller cannot move deeper than >the infinity position." > >Care may still be needed however. All Leica lenses (and most >Leica-compatible lenses from other manufacturers) turn anticlockwise >as seen from the front to change the focus from infinity to closer >distances. However, the Leica-Sonnar (and perhaps some other non-Leitz >lenses) turns in the opposite direction! > >On any variable-height (sloped) cam lens there is obviously at some >point around the circumference of the cam when the low part meets the >high part. With the Leica-Sonnar fitted and focussed to infinity, the >rangefinder roller is sitting at the lowest point on the cam, and just >to its right (as seen from the front of the camera) the cam slopes >upwards at an angle of around 30 - 40 degrees to reach its highest >part. The act of mounting and unmounting the lens will thus bring this >high point against the roller, requiring the latter to move the extra >2mm deeper into the camera body, which it may or may not be able to >do. > >So if you want to try another manufacturer’s lens on your Bessa or >Hexar, I’d recommend that you make sure that the lens uses a >Leitz-style parallel cam. If it does not, check where the step in the >cam lies when the lens is focussed at infinity and minimum distance, >and how that step will move as the lens is mounted and removed. The >safest measure will probably be to mount and unmount the lens with its >focusing set to minimum distance to draw the cam as far as possible >into the body of the lens. (The most important exception to that rule >is the dual-range Summicron, which has two cams at different heights, >and which should be fitted and removed with its focusing mount set to >infinity.) > >Regards, > >Doug Richardson *Thanks Doug. * Howard