Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/06/06

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Subject: [Leica] RE: Lens tolerances
From: Herbert & Lee Kanner <kanner@acm.org>
Date: Wed, 6 Jun 2001 13:58:41 -0700
References: <200106061837.LAA15536@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us>

This reminds me of a slide show a fellow student put on back in the 
'50s.  When I expressed amazement at the quality of the slides taken 
with an Argus C3, he explained that he had a friend at the Argus 
factory who selected a good specimen for him.

Made me wonder if the difference between a prime lens and a 
"consumer" lens is the percentage of the specimens that the 
manufacturer is willing to junk.

Herb



>
>Date: Wed, 06 Jun 2001 08:50:41 +0100
>From: David Prakel <dgp@btconnect.com>
>Subject: Lens tolerances was RE: [Leica] 35mm R Lens recommendation
>Message-ID: <B7439F2A.6CB%dgp@btconnect.com>
>References:
>
>on 5/6/2001 7:48 pm, David Rodgers at
>owner-leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us wrote:
>
>>>>  In a nutshell, the 35/1.4 - R is the best 35 lens I have used, including
>>  the 35/1.4-M asph.  But perhaps I was just lucky with the one I got.<<
>>
>>  This brings up an interesting point regarding sample variations. Years ago I
>>  had 3 Nikkor 28/2.8 AIS lenses. One was noticably superior to the other two;
>>  so much so that I could pick out photographs I made with that lens.
>
>Flashback to the 60s. There was a good deal of laughter in the camera shop
>when my father took home their entire stock of new Nikkor 50mm f2s to test
>and select the one he would keep. There wasn't much laughter when they saw
>the results of the best of the bunch! I learned an important lesson.
>
>
- -- 
Herbert Kanner
kanner@acm.org
650-326-8204

Replies: Reply from "G. Michael Paine" <mickeyp35@earthlink.net> ([Leica] RE: Lens tolerances)