Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/07/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> > on 7/18/01 4:32 AM, Peter Klein at pklein@2alpha.net wrote: > > > Because if they did, you'd fall in. > > >Gilbert Plantinga <gilplant@earthlink.net>> wrote: > >Not exactly. You see, when you walk into a small room with the Noctilux it > > tends to suck all of the available light out of the room as soon as you take > > off the lens cap. With the wide field of view of a 28 you could do some > > serious environmental damage outdoors! Serious photon shortage! > > Quite right, Gilbert. But it's a safety issue, too. The stream of > hyperaccellerated photons running at the edge of the lens' angle of view > creates a partial electromagnetic vacuum just outside and behind the > perimeter of the front element. The wider the lens, the farther around > and behind the lens this vacuum goes. At 28mm and wider, the > photographer is in serious danger with an f/1.0 lens. And with wide > lenses, you tend to get closer to your subjects, endangering them as > well. > > All this was discovered in Wetzlar in the 1950s. Young genius lens > designer Heinz Blitzengartner created what he thought to be a > breakthrough 28mm f/1.0 lens prototype, only to be sucked into the lens > and implanted onto a roll of Agfachrome the first time he tried it. > Fortunately, Heinz' colleagues realized what had happened. They quickly > capped and removed the lens, and Heinz popped out of the camera. He was > not seriously injured, but was so embarrased by the unexpected turn of > events that he quit optical design and became a quantum physicist. > > --Peter Er, Peter, that would be early 1958 when I moved to Wetzlar (Beethoven Strasse). I visited the Leitz factory, and like any typically curious American Kid, asked the question, "What's this button for?" (push) I heard a whooshing noise, and the place darkened several f stops, and well, you know the rest. They made me stay on the East side of the Lahn River from then on. Regards, SonC