Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>From the Leica web site: Angle of view (Diagonal, horizontal, vertical) 50mm Tri-Elmar-M (47, 40, 27) 35mm Summicron-M (63, 54, 38) 28mm Summicron-M (75, 65, 46) 24mm Elmarit-M (84, 74, 53) 21mm Elmarit-M (92, 81, 59) So, assuming that the 1.3x factor cuts the angle of view down to the next higher focal length, we should see the cyan vignetting on the following focal length lenses: (Diagonal, horizontal, vertical) 50mm (no, no, no) 35mm (no, no, no) 28mm (yes, no, no) 24mm (yes, yes, no) 21mm (yes, yes, no) Under 21mm (yes, yes, yes) In other words, a 28mm lens on the M8 should show some cyan vignetting at the corners, which is what I find on the TE. The 35mm setting is barely a problem, and the 50mm setting is no problem, on the TE. This confirms the numbers above. You would expect cyan problems at the left and right edges of the 21mm and 24mm lenses. I used a 486 filter on a Nikon 17-55 while shooting snow pictures (do not ask why). I got strong cyan vignetting at the corners, and left and right. Those pictures are now b&w, and that filter now sits on a 70-200 permanently. Cheers, Bob ============== Message: 11 Date: Mon, 19 Mar 2007 07:09:47 -0700 From: "Frank Filippone" <red735i@earthlink.net> Subject: RE: [Leica] Ir filter and film cameras, take it off To: "'Leica Users Group'" <lug@leica-users.org> Message-ID: <014d01c76a30$410e9e40$c32bdac0$@net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" The last word from Schneider Optics themselves on the 486 filter...... ---------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT NOTE REGARDING WIDE-ANGLE LENSES. Please note however that, in contrast to mass-colored (integrally colored) filter glass, the UV-IR barrier filter is based on thin-film technology. More than 30 interference coatings are vapor-deposited on one side, while the opposite side is MRC-coated. In wide-angle lenses, the laws of physics lead to shallower incidence angles for peripheral rays. For geometric reasons these rays have to travel further through the interference coatings than rays traveling vertically through the coatings in the centre of the lens. With increasing angle of incidence, this leads to a change in light color towards blue. This effect can clearly be seen by looking at an UV-IR barrier filter from an angle. The color of the reflected light changes, with a similar effect on the light traveling through the filter. The filter is therefore not suitable for lens systems with an angle of view of more than 60? -------------------------------------------------------- Guess I was suspicious, right and wrong all at the same time. Now to figure out which of the Leica lenses have an angle of view of more than 60 degrees...... Anyone interested? If you want the entire specialized word file sent to me by Schneider, please email me directly..... Frank Filippone red735i@earthlink.net