Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]- --============_-1267797773==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed" At f/2 the image becomes more contrasty and especially the edge definition improves in the field. But it is not up to the quality you expect from a topclass f/2 design. In itself the image quality is very good. Very fine detail is now detectable with slightly soft edge definition. At f/2.8 the contrast again improves and now extremely fine detail can be recorded. At f/4 we find an excellent quality over the whole picture area. Extremely fine detail is now rendered with good clarity. A very critical look will reveal that the overall contrast and micro contrast are lower than the contemporary Leica designs and some veiling glare also reduces the recording ability of the finest details. There is a focus shift, reducing the contrast on axis. Tangentially the aberrations grow quite a bit in the field. From an aperture of f/5.6 quality drops, especially in the field where detail gets a bit fuzzy. Close-up performance is not as good as at infinity, Th whole image is a bit softer now and you need to stop down to 2,8 or 4 to get optimum imagery at this distance. The Nokton is quite sensitive to flare and here you need some caution. Conclusion. This is a difficult lens to evaluate and it shows the classical dilemma of any tester. Figures and MTF graphs are not enough. Star-ratings wil not show the subtle differences and a cursory report will fail to draw attention to tye character. The basic optical design of this lens is outstanding and it will certainly be studied by several optical departments over the world. Mechanically and from an engineering standpoint it gives mixed feelings.The decentring is an indication of mounting tolerances and the economics of manufacturing. You get what you pay for. The image quality in most practical situations is impressive. Flare is quite pronounced in backlightning and when recording specular highlights or small light points. The Summilux-M as comparison has at full aperture higher contrast on axis but its performance in the outer zones is not as good and the recording ability of very fine detail over the picture area is also not as good. But its engineering is superb and its flare reduction is also better. So which lens is best? My list would be. Number 1 is the Summilux-R new, the number 2 with a fair gap is the Nokton and the number 3 is the Summilux-M, which is better engineered but optically not as good. Do you really see these optical differences? Thats the 10.000 dollar question, Whatever the vanishing breed of people dedicated to resolution numbers may declare, most picture taking situations can be covered with 10 to 20 lp/mm for exhibition quality and in this area the Nokton performs admirably well. It does not have the clarity of fine detail of the better Leica lenses, nor the clean edge definition of larger subject outlines. In fact it is a bit dull in the shadows and fine detail has a coarser image and a fuzzier edge. But face to face with the Summilux-M the Nokton wins on points, not by knock out. Erwin - --============_-1267797773==_ma============ Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii" <fontfamily><param>Times</param>At f/2 the image becomes more contrasty and especially the edge definition improves in the field. But it is not up to the quality you expect from a topclass f/2 design. In itself the image quality is very good. Very fine detail is now detectable with slightly soft edge definition. At f/2.8 the contrast again improves and now extremely fine detail can be recorded. At f/4 we find an excellent quality over the whole picture area. Extremely fine detail is now rendered with good clarity. A very critical look will reveal that the overall contrast and micro contrast are lower than the contemporary Leica designs and some veiling glare also reduces the recording ability of the finest details. There is a focus shift, reducing the contrast on axis. Tangentially the aberrations grow quite a bit in the field. From an aperture of f/5.6 quality drops, especially in the field where detail gets a bit fuzzy. Close-up performance is not as good as at infinity, Th whole image is a bit softer now and you need to stop down to 2,8 or 4 to get optimum imagery at this distance. The Nokton is quite sensitive to flare and here you need some caution. Conclusion. This is a difficult lens to evaluate and it shows the classical dilemma of any tester. Figures and MTF graphs are not enough. Star-ratings wil not show the subtle differences and a cursory report will fail to draw attention to tye character. The basic optical design of this lens is outstanding and it will certainly be studied by several optical departments over the world. Mechanically and from an engineering standpoint it gives mixed feelings.The decentring is an indication of mounting tolerances and the economics of manufacturing. You get what you pay for. The image quality in most practical situations is impressive. Flare is quite pronounced in backlightning and when recording specular highlights or small light points. The Summilux-M as comparison has at full aperture higher contrast on axis but its performance in the outer zones is not as good and the recording ability of very fine detail over the picture area is also not as good. But its engineering is superb and its flare reduction is also better. So which lens is best? My list would be. Number 1 is the Summilux-R new, the number 2 with a fair gap is the Nokton and the number 3 is the Summilux-M, which is better engineered but optically not as good. Do you really see these optical differences? Thats the 10.000 dollar question, Whatever the vanishing breed of people dedicated to resolution numbers may declare, most picture taking situations can be covered with 10 to 20 lp/mm for exhibition quality and in this area the Nokton performs admirably well. It does not have the clarity of fine detail of the better Leica lenses, nor the clean edge definition of larger subject outlines. In fact it is a bit dull in the shadows and fine detail has a coarser image and a fuzzier edge. But face to face with the Summilux-M the Nokton wins on points, not by knock out. Erwin </fontfamily> - --============_-1267797773==_ma============--