Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/05/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>Well Andrew, this will be a long answer to a complicated problem. >First of all: why the change from two to one aspheric lens. Any aspheric >introduces two problems and splves a number of other ones. While >correcting some aberrations (Spherical aberration in particular and also >com.(the recent article about the 35mm Asperics erroneously only mentions >coma) it generates other faults. These however are quite difficult to >correct. The more aspherisc the more problems. Aspherics need very small >tolerances during the production stage. So more aspherics mean more >control at the production. >So it is quite sensible to try to reduce the number of aspherics. From >the optical and production view the first version is more 'difficilt'than >the current one. >Your kind of testing must be quite inconclusive. Colour neg material is >totally unsuitable for lens testing (with the exception of the Ektar 25, >BUT then a high performance enlarger lens is imperative) >Your 4x6 prints are too small to see the details, even with a magnifier. >And what you see is the result of the enlarger lens of the lab, And these >are notoriously off margin quite often. >And hand held shots can be misleading. See the two pictures in the >Viewfinder article referred to. Both pictures show elongated light >sources all over the field. From center to corner. The authors attribute >it to coma. BUT: coma is an off axis aberration and is only seen in out >of center areas. Therefore their 'coma' is presumably shaking of the >camera while shooting handheld. >The remark in that article that at f/5,6 both aspherics work fine is true >but totally uninformative. Every lens in the Leica stable, gives very >good to suberb results at f/5,6. The critical opening would be f/2,8 or >f/2,0. That separates the good from the bad. >Now to the performance of the 35mm ASPH. At 1,4 you are in Nirwana land: >the lens then exhibits a high contrast, very fine detailed image with no >traces of flare and extremely good suppression of halo around light >sources. This performance is a quantum leap above the old Summilux >1,4/35. At f/2.0 the performance of the ASPH is slightly better than at >1,4. In comparison the Summicron-M 35mm ( 7 element version) at f/2,0 is >the equal of the f/2,0 performance of the ASPH. From then on both lenses >are the same performance wise. >So if the maximum aperture is not absolutely needed the current Summicron >35mm is certainly the equal of the ASPH at apertures from 2,0. Remember: >apherics are needed to enhance performance in situations where high >apertures and/or large fields of view must be covered. >I really am eager to see what the announced 35mm Summicron ASPH will do. >Erwin Puts Erwin, how right you are! Gerard Captijn, Geneva, Switzerland. E-mail: captyng@vtx.ch Fax: +41 (22) 700 39 28