Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/03/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Re: slow speeds with rangefinder vs. SLR cameras I suspect the reason images are sharperat slow speeds with the rangefinder cameras is probably due ( provided everything else is equal) to the mirror flip that occurs during exposure with the SLR. I presume that if both cameras were mounted on a rigid tripod and the mirror raised in the SLR prior to exposure, the difference would be minimal. I have been an amateur photographer for about 66 years. In my experience rating sharpness amongst various lenses is often a function of the user. Some heavy coffee drinkers can develop a slight almost imperceptible tremor which can translate into a fuzzy picture at slow speeds. In my years I tended to try shooting my pictures at higher speeds when possible, unless I needed a greater amount of depth of field, at which time a monopod could be used for the slower resulting speed. My wife never used film with speeds slower than 400 asa in order to guarantee a faster shutter speed. After reading LUG for over a week, it would appear that perhaps it should be divided into two sections: One for technical expertise exchange and the other section for social and political comment. In my years I have dicovered that injecting politics and religion into any organization often sows the seeds of its ultimate destruction. Allan Jay Silver, MD