Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/06/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Steve asked about using M-mount lenses on the NEX-7 so I thought I'd discuss what I've learned from the trip to Alaska. I shot over 2,000 images with the NEX-7, almost all of them with Leica or CV glass. There's a good reason for this: the kit lens that comes with the camera is a very ordinary 18-55 zoom. There's also a 55-200mm zoom that is, as my kids would say, an "epic fail." Don't buy it. It's okay for video, maybe. I learned on the trip that using M glass on the NEX-7 does work and does produce darn nice images. BUT . . . and this is a major issue . . . focusing becomes work. The NEX-7 has (I believe) contrast auto-focus and focus confirmation (with non-autofocus lenses.) With an adaptor it can handle the upscale Sony phase detection autofocus from the alpha cameras. I gather that some of these lenses are quite good but I don't have any and the added adaptor won't then handle M lenses which, for me, is the whole point of the exercise. I initially thought that I'd simply be able to snap on the Novaflex adaptor, add the lens, and use the focus confirmation built into the NEX-7. It does work - you get a colored outline around areas that the camera computes as being in focus. It's possible to change the outline color to white or yellow or red. I use red. But it's not very accurate. But there's another workflow that works very well: It's possible to assign the focus-assist function built into the camera to one of the camera's many buttons. Pressing this will put a colored rectangle on the screen (or the electronic viewfinder). Pressing another, user-definable, button will then zoom in on the area of that rectangle to something over 1:1. If you press that same button again you are zoomed in a little more. Pressing the shutter button half-way then returns to the full view-finder mode. The focus confirmation works inside the zoomed view. So the process works like this: press the focus assist button then the zoom button, focus, press the shutter button at least half-way and then all the way to capture the image. When working on a tripod, with the 100mm APO mounted, this works splendidly. The focus rectangle can be moved around, then zoomed, focused, and shot, without moving the camera. For still-life it's great. For hand-held work with a wide-open lens, this process is awkward. I've gotten reasonably adept at it, but there are still missed shots because of the time taken to get the focus right. With the kit lens the camera is a great travel camera within the constraints of the lens. It does shoot really nice video. I'll have some examples of that for you once it's all edited. The 1.5x effective focal-length multiplier makes a 50mm into a 75. A 28 or 35 becomes a normal lens. I used the camera with the Leica 35mm summicron on it most of the time, shifted to the CV 35mm f1.2 in really low light, and used the 100 APO quite a bit as well. But I also worked with two cameras around my neck - the other being the M8. I can look through my slides in Lightroom and instantly know which are the M8 images. It's really rather amazing. But I can't mount a 280mm lens on the Leica. Or shoot video with it. So these two cameras will probably live in tandem for some time. I don't see an M9 or M10 in my future anytime soon: the house needs painting (M9) and there is some dental work (replacing implants) to be done (a couple of M9's or M10's). Still, the NEX-7 produces very nice results once the learning curve is mounted. Now if they just give me a way to turn OFF the blankety-blank video button so I don't shoot 5 minutes of the camera hanging down I'll be happy. Adam Bridge