NickTrop
Veteran
And the winner is???? The Voightlander Color Ultron 50mm f1.8. I can not post pics as I have one on its way in the mail... Below is a Gemini AI summary on the article/lens:
The Giant Slayer: How the Color-Ultron Topped the Charts
In the early 1980s, the German magazine Color-Foto conducted a rigorous technical bench test of approximately fifteen 50mm lenses. To the shock of the photographic community, the Voigtländer Color-Ultron 50mm f/1.8 (specifically the version produced by Rollei) took the #1 spot, outperforming the legendary Leica Summicron-R 50mm f/2 in several key metrics.1. The "Planar" DNA
The secret to its success wasn't actually a "Voigtländer" design in the traditional sense. By the time this lens was released, Zeiss had taken over Voigtländer and eventually sold the brand to Rollei. The Color-Ultron is effectively a Zeiss Planar 50mm f/1.8 in disguise. It utilizes a 7-element, 6-group design that was optimized for maximum center-to-edge resolution.2. Superior Contrast and "Snap"
While Leica lenses of that era (like the Summicron-R) were famous for their smooth micro-contrast and "Leica Glow," the Color-Foto tests prioritized MTF (Modulation Transfer Function) scores—essentially how well a lens maintains contrast as details get finer. The Color-Ultron exhibited:- Extremely high wide-open sharpness: Unlike many contemporary 50mms that needed to be stopped down to f/4 for critical sharpness, the Ultron was biting at f/1.8.
- Color Correction: As the name implies, it was specifically optimized for the "Color" era, with multi-coatings that produced punchier, more saturated reds and blues than the more "natural" (some would say clinical) Leica R rendering.
3. Resolution vs. Character
The Leica Summicron-R 50mm was (and is) a masterpiece of balanced aberrations, providing a very "plastic" 3D look. However, the Color-Ultron simply moved more "lines per millimeter" onto the film. In a laboratory environment, the Ultron’s ability to resolve fine detail across the entire frame—even into the corners—was statistically superior to the Leica.Technical Snapshot: Voigtländer Color-Ultron 50mm f/1.8
| Feature | Detail |
| Optical Design | 7 elements in 6 groups (based on the Zeiss Planar). |
| Unique Trait | Some early versions featured a concave front element, though the "Color-Ultron" version tested by Color-Foto usually had a flat or slightly convex front. |
| Mounts | Most commonly found in M42 screw mount or Rollei QBM. |
| Rendering | High contrast, saturated colors, and very "modern" sharpness for a vintage lens. |