Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>> The really sad news is that the 50 f1.8 AF Nikkor (cost: $85 new at B&H) knocks all those zooms off their perches, and in fact it holds its own quite surprisingly against my current-generation 50 Summicron-M even at f2, although I suspect the Nikkor will be landfill decades before the Summicron needs a re-lube. <<<< I agree with this...this lens is distinctly sharper than the Summicron in pictures. So many Leica photographers seem to think that no other company in the world can build a lens, that only Leica can. That Leica must be first and everyone else ranked in some order after that. Mere bigotry! <s> Every lens line has high points and low points; most lenses have strengths and weaknesses. What is needed is not a blanket assertion of "superiority" but a more subtle understanding of what one's lenses can and cannot do well. This leads to appreciation. All major lensmakers make at least a few great lenses. Some surpass the equivalent lenses from Leica. Some merely have different qualities that, if we appreciated the distinctions, we might prefer--or might not. Often, by far the major advantage Leica has is simply that people will pay more for its products, so the designer has more money to work with. Of course half of this advantage is eaten away in production inefficiencies and inefficiencies of scale; but it is a very substantial advantage. If Canon or Minolta could charge $1,000 for a medium-speed fixed normal, do you believe they couldn't come up with superlatively fine lenses? Olympus makes a 50mm f/2 macro that blows the Summicron-M out of the water; and one of the best 50mm lenses I have ever used is the f/1.4 Pentax Super-Multi-Coated Takumar M42 screwmount lens for the Spotmatic. A wonderful lens. You can purchase it used for $79. When I give people a stack of prints made with various 50mms and ask them to pick out the Summicron shots, typically most of the shots they pick were taken with the Takumar. Is the Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 "better" than the Summicron? Is Campbells' Chicken Noodle soup better than Campbell's Alphabet Vegetable soup? A deep philosophical question! <g> - --Mike