Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/08/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A rangefinder is able to measure the distance from an object to the observer by measuring the angle a prism or mirror is rotated to superimpose two images from points perpendicular to the object. There are three variables: 1) the quality of the mechanism. The Leica rangefinder does all its work with only 4.5mm of arm travel! This allows the mechanism to be very compact but also means it has to very carefully built and calibrated. 2) the magnification of the two images you are lining up. The more magnification, the more precisely you can match the two superimposed images. The ability of the operator's eye to resolve subtle differences has a strong influence as well. This why some people are fine focusing wide aperture lenses even with low mag finders such as the Hexar RF (0.60x lifesize). 3) the distance apart the two images are sampled from. The larger the base of the rangefinder, the easier it is to register subtle distance differences in objects far away. This is easy to demonstrate by looking at a view with objects at different distances. Shift your head side to side slightly. Notice how objects close to you shift from side side much more than objects quite distant from you. The further you shift from side to side, the same as increasing your rangefinder's base length, the more distant objects increase their small shift, making it easier to judge subtle differences in the shift of distant objects. The plane of focus of a lens is just that: a flat plane. There is an area in front and behind the plane of focus that appears sharp due to the small size of the "circles of confusion". A line of points running perpendicular to the plane of focus, both ahead and behind it, will be rendered as small circles, called "circles of confusion", whose size depends on three things: 1) the size of the lens aperture. Small apertures make the out of focus points register as smaller circles of confusion than at large apertures. 2) the distance the points are away from the plane of focus. The further a point is away from the plane of focus the larger the circle will be. 3) the magnification or size of the object in the image. The smaller the point is rendered, the smaller the various circles of confusion will be. A wide angle lens will render a particular point at a specific distance smaller than a narrow angle lens (telephoto) will. pt2 coming > From: "Tony Salce" <NadinaTony@bigpond.com> > > For someone reasonably new to rangefinders, could someone be so kind as to > explain in simple english, what is meant by the following quote from Dick > Gilcreast's article in the latest edition of Viewfinder, in respect of his > preference of the M3 over the M2: > > " In a rangefinder camera the RF needs to have enough base lenght in order > for the indicated focus point to be WITHIN the rather narrow depth of field, > so it made sense for Leitz to design their original M camera around these > two lenses." (ie 50mm and 90 mm- this is my addition) > > Could you also explain why the 0.72 magnification is not as good for the > 50mm lens as compared with a 35mm lens ? I hope that question makes sense. > > Actually I don't fully comprehend ( I am embarassed to admit) the > distinction between the 0.92 magnification of say the M3 and the 0.72 of the > M2. >