Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/09/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Patrick, I did test and try out the Avenor 21/2,8 and the Avenor 28/3,5 in 1996. = The 21/2,8 is good value for the money and albeit a bit soft wide open perfor= med very well otherwise. The Avenor 28/3,5 was OK but not as crisp as I would have liked it. It performed somewhat like an old Summaron 28/5,6. I have heard that it has been re-released in Japan with improved coating and mor= e blades in the aperture (10 instead of 6). I have not had a chance to try = it out yet. There is somewhat of a cottage industry in Japan when it comes t= o making Leica compatible lenses. Ricoh released a 28/2,8 ( 7 elements with= two aspeherical elements) in June (Chrome version) and this week in a limited edition in black. Konica has released a 50/2,4 Hexanon in a collapsible L= eica screw mount ( chrome lens, six elements, two center pairs are cemented), = I have had one of these for 4 month and it is a very good lens. Wide open i= t outperforms the 50/2.8 Elmar in its new configuration and the Elmar is slightly more contrasty at 5,6 and 8. It is priced at Yen 68 000 in Tokyo= and is widely available according to my Japanese shooter friends. There is a slight difference in contrast between the Hexanon and the Elmar (new version). The Japanese lens is softer and lacks some of the punch of the Elmar. Konice also made a very limited production of the 35/2 Hexar lens= in Leica compatible screw mount. It was a small run of 1000 or so lenses and= it has already achieved collectible status , more due to the low production = than the performance that was somewhat lackluster according to shooters who tr= ied it. I have no problem with anyone making lenses for Leicas, if the lens sui= ts my shooting it could be made by the local bottling plant for all I care. = In the case of the Japanese lenses I have tried out, they are uniformly acceptable in performance, they tend to have some peculiarities when it c= omes to contrast and colorrendition and the mounts tends to be made from light= er alloys than Leicas. If you are a heavy user of the lens, it might only la= st 50% or 70% of what the corresponding Leica lens would, but it also most likely only cost you 35-50% of what the Leica lens did. Your call! I am waiting for my 28/2,8 Ricoh and 35/2 Hexar and should have them by = the end of this month. The 28/2,8 I had a chance to shoot with in Tokyo in February, it was a prototype lens, but the images were more than satisfactory. The price I have seen quoted on this lens is Yen 98 000 for= the chrome version, with a finder. The Avenor finders (21 and 28mm lenses) ar= e HUGE but very good and 1/3 of the price of Leicas. This means I can drop = or destroy 3 of them at the same cost as I have to pay for one Leica finder.= Not a bad deal. I think we should all remember that the camera and lens are only as good= as the person who uses it and in most cases modern lenses can outperform mos= t commonly used film, particularly if you are a black/white or color neg fi= lm shooter. Sometimes it is great to be able to buy a lens in a slightly les= s used focal length and keep it around, without having to starve for a long time to afford it I also think it is good with competition, Leica has rul= ed the rangefinder market for too long and the emergence of =93pirate=94 gla= ss and other rangefinders is only good as it has forced them from their complac= ency of the last 10-15 years. The products that they have let out in the last = 2-3 years prove that. The 35/1,4 ASPH, the 24/2,8 ASPH and the 35/2 ASPH are only the beginning I presume. I would love to see an upgraded 50/1,4, a s= mall 75/2,4 APO and an improved 90/2 and of course all the modifications I can imagine on the M6. Hey, one can dream and the 24/2,8 ASPH proves that dre= ams sometimes comes true! Tom