Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/05/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In the case of the M, I believe that the eyepiece as manufactured puts the virtual image out at infinity (lots of cameras don't). If I am correct, and this supposition worked for me, then the corrector lens you want is the one that comes closest to your prescription in diopters. The reason I say this is that I bought a corrector at the infamous K & S in Palo Alto. I checked it out by looking through my glasses at a distant object and rapidly switching between my glass and the eyepiece correction lens. The idiot clerk insisted that you couldn't do it that way and ran off to find a Leica; I hadn't brought mine. Of course, when he found one, the corrector that I chose seemed ok when screwed into the camera, but in my opinion, my ability to judge through the camera was not as critical as the way I had been doing it. The clerk kept protesting and I finally had to shut him up by telling him that my graduate degree was in physics and that I knew a wee bit about optics. To add injury to insult, their price was $99 for that bit of glass. To bad I hadn't checked first with B & H, whose price, if I remember correctly, is $72. Good luck, Herb - ----------Original Message---------------- I'm a little fuzzy on the question of selecting a correction lens for the M6 eyepiece. Is there a way other than trial and error to determine which one is most appropriate? The range of potential dioptre adjustment seems to be very broad and I'm certain that I fall somewhere in there, but is there a way based on my eyeglass prescription to tell which one of the alternative lenses would mesh best with the uncorrected eyepiece? Thanks for your help. Probably a dumb question. Daniel Bowdoin - -- - -- Herbert Kanner, Ph.D. CPSR Secretary email: kanner@acm.org Tel: 650-326-8204 Fax: 650-326-8204 Mobile 650-208-9417 PGP fingerprint: ADDB 9384 17EC 35BC 95C2 CEDD 3C00 9B67 E953 C038 Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) is an organization that addresses the benefits and risks to society resulting from the use of computers. For information, please visit our Web page at http://www.cpsr.org