Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/02/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>When focusing a rangefinder camera, you >>should start either at infinity or the closest setting, and move the ring in >>one motion until the two images coincide--do not rack it back and forth, as >>you might with an SLR, to improve the focus. The reason this works, I >>understand, is due to the nature of the mechanical linkage between lens and >>rangefinder--racking it back and fortyh produces inaccuracies. >This is an old machinists trick. As the bed screw of a mill or lathe wears >it develops slop. When moving the bed to make a cut you back up so that the >screw is engaged fully when your tool touches the work. Same with the >rangefinder. I must be among the heretical few that rocks the focus of my lenses when trying to place the focus plane with my rangefinders. Having tried the varieties of advice that exist on the subject, I find a higher percentage of hits when rocking with longer lenses at wider apertures and closer distances. The lenses with smooth, free focus movement have worked well with this method. When possible, the best technique I've found is to make sure I'm using vernier seeing and aligning lines or edges at the top or bottom of the rangefinder rectangle. If the focus point does not contain lines or edges with good contrast, the rocking lets me find the maximum contrast point of the superimposed images a little better. I could be all wet, but I'm having trouble buying into the theory about excessive slop in the M rangefinder. If one needs to "load" the system from one direction in order to provide a stable bearing surface, then approaching the same point from the opposite direction wouldn't necessarliy result in using the same relative bearing surface. The two settings would be slightly different under such a condition. It seems a good design should have taken the ambiguity of mechanical backlash into account and made sure it was below the practical limits of application, i.e. DOF. Besides, the danged things are spring loaded. If the spring tension is doing its job, the relative bearing surfaces should be the same regardless of the direction of travel. The spring makes sure the system is loaded the same way each time in each direction. I have heard about leaving one's controls in a default position (focus at one extreme, etc.) so that the photog could react quickly and instinctively to an image opportunity by always making adjustments from the same rest point. This technique is different from the issues described above. Disclaimer: I've only had the pleasure of using later model rangefinders (M4-2, M4-P, M6). Maybe a more mature rangefinder would show the slop in focusing due to its age. Practically speaking, I haven't seen it's effects on film. Regards, Kevin kburke@iterated.com