hunz
Established
ok. thanks
exactly, why didn't they design it so people can just screw a filter directly onto the lens? - like Leica lenses
-- ok, let me rephrase this. can people screw a UV filter for example onto the lens WITHOUT the need for the adaptor ring?
I'm wondering if the hood interferes with the optical finder sufficiently to make the optical finder difficult to use, or if it barely intrudes?
That the Cap not fit on the adapterring and the lens hood is for me a big design mistake. I think they could send with the lens hood a new cap that fit on it.
But I have an other important question: When the lens hood is on the camera do I see something of it in the OVF? And when how much comes this hood in the OVF view? I hope not or only a little bit. Has someone inforamtion about it?
Nothing official, but I have seen TTV images with the hood attached and in OVF mode the lens shade is visible and obstructs part of the view. I have to look again at the images assuming I can even find them again to see if the hood encroaches in to the frame and over the frame lines.
Well - didn't you know - Leica never makes mistakes. 😉 It's the users' fault if they have a problem with this camera. And don't you ever complain, or else other LU's might make fun of you ... 🙂Why is this not considered a "design mistake" when it happens on a Leica M? I'm just saying...
Thanks for this information. I hope that the hood not will show into the frame, because than I can't use it. Maybe next week, when the camera is out, someone can give use more information about it.
It would seem easier to design a non-obstructing hood/viewfinder combo for a fixed lens camera than an interchangeable lens camera.Why is this not considered a "design mistake" when it happens on a Leica M? I'm just saying...
~Joe
Not really, because whether the lens obstructs the viewfinder's view depends on the distance between the two. And, the further away from each other both are, the bigger the camera will be.It would seem easier to design a non-obstructing hood/viewfinder combo for a fixed lens camera than an interchangeable lens camera.
Not really, because whether the lens obstructs the viewfinder's view depends on the distance between the two. And, the further away from each other both are, the bigger the camera will be.
You're right. However, this won't help too much in the case of teh X100, whose hardware design is fixed.It also depends on viewfinder magnification, frame lines (which depend on focal length and focus distance), and the physical length of the lens. On the M system all of these can change depending on the camera/lens combo, making it very difficult to predict viewfinder blockage. On the X100, none of them change (much) so it shouldn't be hard to come up with a hood that doesn't block the frame.