Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/06/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Question about exposure. I assume you use the aperture priority mode. Is the exposure liner or does the camera start to overexpose as you stop the Leica lens down like it does on a Canon or Nikon DLSR body? Aram -------------------------------------------------- From: "Adam Bridge" <abridge at mac.com> Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2012 5:25 PM To: "Leica Users Group" <lug at leica-users.org> Subject: [Leica] Using M (and R) glass on a Sony NEX-7 - my experience aftera few thousand images > Steve asked about using M-mount lenses on the NEX-7 so I thought I'd > discuss what I've learned from the trip to Alaska. I shot over 2,000 > images with the NEX-7, almost all of them with Leica or CV glass. There's > a good reason for this: the kit lens that comes with the camera is a very > ordinary 18-55 zoom. There's also a 55-200mm zoom that is, as my kids > would say, an "epic fail." Don't buy it. It's okay for video, maybe. > > I learned on the trip that using M glass on the NEX-7 does work and does > produce darn nice images. BUT . . . and this is a major issue . . . > focusing becomes work. > > The NEX-7 has (I believe) contrast auto-focus and focus confirmation (with > non-autofocus lenses.) With an adaptor it can handle the upscale Sony > phase detection autofocus from the alpha cameras. I gather that some of > these lenses are quite good but I don't have any and the added adaptor > won't then handle M lenses which, for me, is the whole point of the > exercise. > > I initially thought that I'd simply be able to snap on the Novaflex > adaptor, add the lens, and use the focus confirmation built into the > NEX-7. It does work - you get a colored outline around areas that the > camera computes as being in focus. It's possible to change the outline > color to white or yellow or red. I use red. But it's not very accurate. > > But there's another workflow that works very well: It's possible to assign > the focus-assist function built into the camera to one of the camera's > many buttons. Pressing this will put a colored rectangle on the screen (or > the electronic viewfinder). Pressing another, user-definable, button will > then zoom in on the area of that rectangle to something over 1:1. If you > press that same button again you are zoomed in a little more. Pressing the > shutter button half-way then returns to the full view-finder mode. The > focus confirmation works inside the zoomed view. > > So the process works like this: press the focus assist button then the > zoom button, focus, press the shutter button at least half-way and then > all the way to capture the image. > > When working on a tripod, with the 100mm APO mounted, this works > splendidly. The focus rectangle can be moved around, then zoomed, focused, > and shot, without moving the camera. For still-life it's great. > > For hand-held work with a wide-open lens, this process is awkward. I've > gotten reasonably adept at it, but there are still missed shots because of > the time taken to get the focus right. > > With the kit lens the camera is a great travel camera within the > constraints of the lens. It does shoot really nice video. I'll have some > examples of that for you once it's all edited. > > The 1.5x effective focal-length multiplier makes a 50mm into a 75. A 28 or > 35 becomes a normal lens. I used the camera with the Leica 35mm summicron > on it most of the time, shifted to the CV 35mm f1.2 in really low light, > and used the 100 APO quite a bit as well. > > But I also worked with two cameras around my neck - the other being the > M8. I can look through my slides in Lightroom and instantly know which are > the M8 images. It's really rather amazing. > > But I can't mount a 280mm lens on the Leica. Or shoot video with it. So > these two cameras will probably live in tandem for some time. I don't see > an M9 or M10 in my future anytime soon: the house needs painting (M9) and > there is some dental work (replacing implants) to be done (a couple of > M9's or M10's). > > Still, the NEX-7 produces very nice results once the learning curve is > mounted. Now if they just give me a way to turn OFF the blankety-blank > video button so I don't shoot 5 minutes of the camera hanging down I'll be > happy. > > Adam Bridge > > >