Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/10/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]First, I think that the upcoming wide angle vewfinder Voigtlander is a really big deal. The usual wide angle lenses showing without an accessory viewfinder will get me out of the Leica fold. Price will be around $900 if memory serves. Second, lets get real about the viewfinder for the new Tri-Elmar. It shows a very clear, very low distortion image with parallax compensation. It has good eye relief. It is smaller than a MR meter that a lot of folks used. No, it doesn't affect the balance of the camera, especially with the Tri-Elmar attached. Please try before you complain. The images I took with the pre-production Tri-Elmar at 16-18-21 looked pretty good to me wide open on my M6. If it looks good full frame then it will look good on an M8. The folks at Leica were pretty sure that the shipping version of the firmware would come out on October 15th giving the good folks in Solms time to check, verify, and upload to shipping cameras. And, based on the many boxes of demo cameras sitting at the factory, they have a pretty good idea of what needs to happen. I will echo others that the display of all the Leica goodies glued to stands was great fun, was full all the time, and had some young folk looking very interested. Between halls Leica had a riser set up with a good selection of cameras, lenses, and sport optics designed with a enough light and space so that you could really come to terms with the equipment. Zeiss is doing some really nice things for the M mount. I had a chance to shoot with the Sonnar 1.5, the Biogon 21, and the Biogon 25. I prefer the 50 Summilux ASPH to the Sonnar 1.5, but the Sonnar does a really, really good job of imaging with a pretty flat field, good rendition of fine detail, and good off center abilities. I prefer the Summilux because it has better really fine detail capture, better contrast, and does better at really close distances; but you pay almost three times the price for that relatively small improvement. The Biogon 21 is a winner and will probably find its way into my bag as the 21 SA won't image well on a digital. I used the 25 Biogon extensively as a fellow LHSA member loaned me his. It is a very nice lens with good detail capture and I loved the 1/3 stops. But just like the 50, the 24 ASPH has a little more contrast, better capture of really fine detail, and a flatter field. Again, not loads better, but noticeably better at a steep price. For the Pentax shooters out there, the new 10MP is a real winner. Small changes to the controls but an improved finder and a very nice vertical grip. With a price under $900 and acces to all those lovely lenses including the new Zeiss offerings it is mighty tempting. The new 50mm F1.2 Canon is an extremely well built lens that focus quickly. Image quality through the viewfinder is very good and field flatness is quite good. Finally Canon has a good 50mm both optically and mechanically. Tina and Ted will love this lens as you can use 3200 ISO and 1.2. Sony is really building on the Alpha mount. They were showing a good 70-200 F2.8 and a 300 F2.8 both of which cover full frame images. The 300 was at least a re-design of the old Minolta lens. Olympus was showing an addition to their 4/3 system that was proportioned more like a film camera than the other E series. If memory serves it was 10MP with a good viewfinder. I am sorry to be so brief but the number of cameras was small and the line was long, boisterous, and quite rude. Rollei offered a new IR film that did not need to be loaded in the dark. Not as grainy as Kodak's but a similar response to filtration and a similar tendency to halate. The real fun of walking all ten halls was seeing all the wierdness. Strange ball heads, software to fix any ill, models dressed as space aliens walking to break, tripods of all shapes, leg number, material, lock mechanism, half a hall filled with telescopes, half a hall filled with inkjet paper manufacturers and more to fill a book. Unlike others, I will probably go back for two days next time as the international efforts are a little more entertaining than at PMA. Don don.dory@gmail.com