Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]- --============_-1281971506==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" The performance at 70mm. At full aperture the overall contrast is a bit less than with the 50 position. In the center the outlines have tightly drawn contours, necessary for the sharpness impression. Very fine detail is clearly rendered with a bit soft edges and extremely fine details are a bit fuzzy and start to overlap each other. In the field fine detail is quite crisply rendered and extremely fine detail is just detectable. The corners show a drop in micro contrast and produce fuzzy detail. Slight barrel distortion and a bit vignetting can be noted. Astigmatism is very well controlled. At f/5.6 the usual crispening over the whole image field is noticeable with a faint improvement of the rendition of very fine details. At f/8 again more contrast and ever finer detail is recorded, now extending into the far corners. At f/16 the performance drops a bit. Performance holds up to and including the macro position. General remarks. Centering is perfect. Veiling glare and secondary ghost images are in most picture taking situations non-existent and hardly to just detectible in adverse conditions The lens is very smooth to operate. It makes a fine general purpose lens for the R8 in all situations where f/4 is enough . The only hassle I have with this lens on the R8 is the relatively low brightness of the screen. A f/4 is a bit meagre here. Given the use of this lens in mostly brighly lit situations a small nuisance. Handling is intuitive and fast. The zoomrange of 2 times is not very impressive, but it is remarkable how many picture taking situations can be handled with this range. The comparison. Compared to the Summicron-R 2/35 and the Summilux 1,4/80 (the 90 would be too long) at their f/4 aperture we see what we remarked in the beginning of this report. A wide aperture lens has an inherently much higher aberration content than a f/4 design and since the current crop of designers masters the intricacies of zoomlenses quite well, we might expect that the fixed focal length lenses are challenged. As they are indeed. The Summicron R 35 at f/4.0 shows a medium/ high contrast with a crispish rendition of extremely fine detail on axis. In the field the outlines are sharply edged, and very fine detail is rendered with soft edges in this zone becoming fuzzy in the corners. At 1 meter the image quality is less than in the infinity position. The Summilux-R 1,4/80 at f/4 has a high contrast image with on axis a clear rendition of very fine detail,becoming soft when looking at extremely fine detail. In the field and the corners the softness at the edges extends in area, becoming slightly fuzzy. Again the close-up performance is less than in the infinity position. Side by side comparison shows that the Summicron and Summilux have a bit less clarity and sparkle of very fine detail than the Vario-Elmar-R , especially in the field. Some study clarifies this behaviour. Looking at the rendition of exceedingly fine detail we note that this level of detail recording is beyond the capabilities of the Summmicron-R and Summilux-R and just within recording level of the Vario-Elmar-R. The Vario-Elmar-R has a lower amount of residual aberrations and a better balance of them. This will show especially in the overall sharpness impression. It is also understandable that the better performance in the field of the Vario-Elmar-R will show in the center too and the somewhat lesser performance in the field of the 'cron and 'lux will also have its effects on the center and overall performance. While it is convenient for a test to divide a lens in zones to describe its performance, in practical photography all zones and residual aberrations contribute to the overall imagery of that lens. You have to sum all optical performance aspects to get one overall quality impression. That is what counts for the viewer and the user. Optical analysis can try to explain why a certain lens has this behaviour or this image character, but the eye is holistic. It captures the image as a whole. Erwin - --============_-1281971506==_ma============ Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii" <fontfamily><param>Times</param>The performance at 70mm. At full aperture the overall contrast is a bit less than with the 50 position. In the center the outlines have tightly drawn contours, necessary for the sharpness impression. Very fine detail is clearly rendered with a bit soft edges and extremely fine details are a bit fuzzy and start to overlap each other. In the field fine detail is quite crisply rendered and extremely fine detail is just detectable. The corners show a drop in micro contrast and produce fuzzy detail. Slight barrel distortion and a bit vignetting can be noted. Astigmatism is very well controlled. At f/5.6 the usual crispening over the whole image field is noticeable with a faint improvement of the rendition of very fine details. At f/8 again more contrast and ever finer detail is recorded, now extending into the far corners. At f/16 the performance drops a bit. Performance holds up to and including the macro position. General remarks. Centering is perfect. Veiling glare and secondary ghost images are in most picture taking situations non-existent and hardly to just detectible in adverse conditions The lens is very smooth to operate. It makes a fine general purpose lens for the R8 in all situations where f/4 is enough . The only hassle I have with this lens on the R8 is the relatively low brightness of the screen. A f/4 is a bit meagre here. Given the use of this lens in mostly brighly lit situations a small nuisance. Handling is intuitive and fast. The zoomrange of 2 times is not very impressive, but it is remarkable how many picture taking situations can be handled with this range. The comparison. Compared to the Summicron-R 2/35 and the Summilux 1,4/80 (the 90 would be too long) at their f/4 aperture we see what we remarked in the beginning of this report. A wide aperture lens has an inherently much higher aberration content than a f/4 design and since the current crop of designers masters the intricacies of zoomlenses quite well, we might expect that the fixed focal length lenses are challenged. As they are indeed. The Summicron R 35 at f/4.0 shows a medium/ high contrast with a crispish rendition of extremely fine detail on axis. In the field the outlines are sharply edged, and very fine detail is rendered with soft edges in this zone becoming fuzzy in the corners. At 1 meter the image quality is less than in the infinity position. The Summilux-R 1,4/80 at f/4 has a high contrast image with on axis a clear rendition of very fine detail,becoming soft when looking at extremely fine detail. In the field and the corners the softness at the edges extends in area, becoming slightly fuzzy. Again the close-up performance is less than in the infinity position. Side by side comparison shows that the Summicron and Summilux have a bit less clarity and sparkle of very fine detail than the Vario-Elmar-R , especially in the field. Some study clarifies this behaviour. Looking at the rendition of exceedingly fine detail we note that this level of detail recording is beyond the capabilities of the Summmicron-R and Summilux-R and just within recording level of the Vario-Elmar-R. The Vario-Elmar-R has a lower amount of residual aberrations and a better balance of them. This will show especially in the overall sharpness impression. It is also understandable that the better performance in the field of the Vario-Elmar-R will show in the center too and the somewhat lesser performance in the field of the 'cron and 'lux will also have its effects on the center and overall performance. While it is convenient for a test to divide a lens in zones to describe its performance, in practical photography all zones and residual aberrations contribute to the overall imagery of that lens. You have to sum all optical performance aspects to get one overall quality impression. That is what counts for the viewer and the user. Optical analysis can try to explain why a certain lens has this behaviour or this image character, but the eye is holistic. It captures the image as a whole. Erwin</fontfamily> - --============_-1281971506==_ma============--