Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/11/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Frank, Marty, Mark? Well, I don't know whether this is focus shift with stopping down or not, and I doubt I could determine this with tests. One would have to step the lens through the indicated focus point, examine the images highly magnified, and determine where the maximum sharpness occurred. At f/16, it would probably take a mathematical analysis of the images and plotting of a curve to determine within a few percent where perfect focus is. My intuition is that the degree of defocusing is more than aperture-related focus shift would produce in any design that Leica would let into production. (Always was a pollyanna.) I think I'll just have to remember to rotate the barrel a millimeter to the near side when shooting at medium distances and wide apertures. And do some testing to see how far I have to stop down to be happy settling for what the RF gives me. ?howard On Nov 7, 2010, at 6:02 AM, Frank Dernie wrote: > Hi Howard, > I think what you are seeing here is the effect of "focus shift". It seems > many lenses have a shift in focus with aperture which is normally masked > by the increasing depth of field with aperture closing, and, on film > bodies, by the effectively thick sensitive layer, since film emulsion is > fairly thick, and the film rarely flat anyway, the focus will fall > -somewhere- within the sensitive volume (it is not that much). A digital > sensor is flat and therefore less tolerant of focus shift, the 90mm f2 apo > has a tiny depth of field and at some apertures the plane of focus falls > outside the depth of field due to focus shift. > It is also difficult to get perfectly in focus anyway, I use mine with a > viewfinder magnifier. > A quick search on the internet will turn up quite a lot of discussion on > this and the 90mm f2 apo-asph lens is one of the most sensitive lens out > there for this problem - sadly. > The new 35mm f1.4 asph came out because focus shift on the existing lens > was being noticed on the M8 and M9 when it was not using film bodies. > cheers, > Frank Dernie