Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/08/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I just received an unusual lens in the mail today. It is an Olympus Zuiko C 4 cm f2.8 in Leica thread mount. I believe that the C stands for coated. The lens does need work, as the infinity lock button has vanished (hey, by the way, now that I have your attention, does anyone have an old trashed Leica-type or Soviet lens with the infinity lock button and spring intact that they'd like to sell or donate to the Langer Olympus 4 cm Restoration Fund?) and there is a big blob of fungus on the inside of the rear element. The fungus is likely to be removable, as the rear element seems to be a single element. I knew about the fungus ahead of time, but as the price was moderate, I thought it was worth the gamble that it could be removed. The lens is very compact -- about the size of a 35mm f3.5 Summaron -- with a clickless f-stop range from f2.8 to 16 and a distance scale measured in feet. It came with a 40mm finder (no parallax correction but it does have an accessory shoe on top) in its own compartment in the lens case. The lenscap reads "Olympus OIC". Does anyone know what OIC stands for? I wonder whether this lens was originally supplied by Olympus for some Leica copy camera as original equipment, or whether it was an inexpensive aftermarket wide angle available in the late 40s or early 50s. The focal length is unusual in Leica thread mount, and I really don't know of another LTM lens in that focal length. Or even a M lens, other than the 40mm f2 for the CL and Minolta CLE. I am curious as to the history of this lens. Mark - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Mark Langer Email address: mlanger@ccs.carleton.ca - ----------------------------------------------------------------------