Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/01/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The European scale was developed by Franz Stolze (1830-1910). It properly runs: 1.1-1.6-2.2-3.3-4.5-6.3-9-12.5-18-25-36-50-71-100 while the International scale properly runs with apertures half-way in between these figures: 1-1.4-2-2.8-4-5.6-8-11-16-22-32-45-64-90 Leitz designed their longer lenses to have sufficient coverage for use as MF and LF lenses, so they included the smaller apertures which are all the rage with LF photographers. Zeiss used International apertures from at least before World War I, but most other European manufacturers used the Stolze scale at least until the Second War. Voigtlander converted immediately prior to the outbreak of that conflagration, but Leitz did not change over until the mid or late 1940's. When they did so, they would remark the lenses as closely as possible, the smallest aperture on a 4/90 Elmar, for instance, becoming f/32 in place of the earlier f/36, though the lens, throughout its production life, could still be moved just a tad PAST f/32 to reach that now-unmarked f/36. Minimum apertures are, of course, also controlled by diffraction effects, which is why so many uncoated lenses have surprising fast minimum stops. For the first decade of its existence, the 1.5/50 Sonnar could only stop to f/8, and even the earliest coated lenses only stopped to f/11. It was not until full coating became the norm that Zeiss reworked this lens to stop down to f/22. Many Leica lenses to this day, even new construction, only stop to f/16. Marc msmall@roanoke.infi.net FAX: +540/343-7315 Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir!