Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I just completed a comparison between the Voigtlander Nokton 1,5/50 and the Leitz Summarit 1.5/50. Overall the Nokton exhibits a bit more contrast and has the ability to resolve slightly finer structures. At full aperture both lenses have low contrast, which does not improve that much when stopping down. Both reach their optimum at 5.6. The Summarit at full aperture has a bit higher center sharpness, but is much worse in the corners. The Nokton has a more even field. It is the suppression of halo around strong light sources where the Nokton is the better lens. It is significantly so. However in daylight situations the internal reflections of the Summarit are better controlled. As can be seen when photographing trees in backlight. The deep shadow areas of the Summarit are black, where the Nokton is a little greyish. Overall however the Nokton is the better lens and , surprisingly, has the same characteristics that makes for the famous Leica glow. When one takes pictures with apertures from 2,8 to 5,6 both lenses are almost equal in performance and character. The Nokton has a little more bite. Very fine detail is not resolved and the contrast stays on the low side. The pictures have a very nice smooth representation of the objects and its various textures. There lack the brittleness and high contrast of modern Leica lenses which brings out every detail with great clarity. The reason why some people prefer the older type of image quality could be the visual information overload which one gets with the newest lenses. But this is my personal opinion and I need to reflect on this more. Erwin Puts