250 Years Voigtländer - Bessa R2M / R3M announced

Heck with the body, I want them to make that lens widely available... 😀

The 50/3.5 Heliar diagram is here: http://www.cameraquest.com/voig101.htm The page in the OP indicates it is a 3 group/5 element design as well, so it should be very similar to the 50/3.5 but 2 stops faster. Pity it's not a collapsible... 😱

IIRC, the Heliar design was Voightlander's design to improve on the Cooke Triplet much as Zeiss was doing at the same time with the Tessar. It certainly wouldn't surprise me if the Sonnar design work wasn't at least partly inspired by it.

William
 
As for what, microscope or telescope objectives is the most likely product for an optical works at that time.

William
 
I couldn't work out the difference in features between the R2M and the R2. Maybe there isn't one. I do note the body style is different than the R2 though.
Maybe they regretted discontinuing the R2?

Nick
 
rbiemer said:
I think the page is saying that production is limited to 1300 of these 🙁 so I'd bet the secondary market price will be higher :bang:
Rob

Well, that is correctly what I want.Will somebody offer me 20-year credit with no interest? :angel:
 
The moment I thought I have cured my GAS, this have to come along and torment me! I do hope that this commemorative set is not restricted to the Europran market as I want that 50mm/2 lens!
 
Just got an email back from Mr. Gandy saying that info will be on his web site soon. So we'll know more then. I have a feeling the German site may well be posted early.

William
 
I hate to be the one to throw the proverbial Spaniel in the works, but I have a queasy feeling that Cosina has reverted to the bad-old dual-curtain mechanical shutter for these commemorative Rs. That shutter, IMO, is way too loud for an RF. I'd like to believe that there's something else used in these bodies, but the smart money says no. (Apologies to all Spaniel lovers here.)


- Barrett (who thought his previous post made it through, but...)
 
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wlewisiii said:
Heck with the body, I want them to make that lens widely available... 😀

The 50/3.5 Heliar diagram is here: http://www.cameraquest.com/voig101.htm The page in the OP indicates it is a 3 group/5 element design as well, so it should be very similar to the 50/3.5 but 2 stops faster. Pity it's not a collapsible... 😱

William

William:

Look closely at the top-down view on the German site. I'd bet that the lens *is* collapsible. I think the photo was taken with the lens collapsed. Notice that the aperture index dot is off center and you can't see the numbers clearly. Here's a link to the photos that made me think this:

R3M in black: http://www.voigtlaender.de/cms/voig...tag6n3l7t.html/$file/bessar3m_top_ret_rgb.jpg

R2M in silver: http://www.voigtlaender.de/cms/voig...tag6n3l3g.html/$file/bessar2m_top_ret_rgb.jpg

Eric
 
Youré right Eric....it seems to be a collapsible lens.

Besides, it seems that the man who wrote the technical data didn´t know anything about the camera as (at least) it´s not an SLR... (or it doesn´t show as).

AFAICR, I read many years ago that Voigtländer was making optics (lenses) in the 17th century, and perhaps also telescopes and microscopes.

Ernesto
 
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Eric Boehm said:
William:

Look closely at the top-down view on the German site. I'd bet that the lens *is* collapsible. I think the photo was taken with the lens collapsed.
Eric

You were right, Eric. The post by Mr. Gandy confirms that it's a collapsible. Oh my aching wallet... :bang: :bang: :bang:

😀

Edit: By the way, welcome to RFF! Hope you enjoy it here.

William
 
I don't see any info on the "M"-versions or the new 50/2 on Gandy's site.

Where is it?
 
Tradition of Confusion

Tradition of Confusion

KoNickon said:
I was looking for the Dynar diagram but couldn't find it at the cameraquest site. Whereabouts is it?

Here's the Dynar:


VCH10150.jpg

As far back as pre-WWII, Voigtlander marketed the Dynar construction as "Heliar", even though the Dynar was actually derived (and thus different) from the Heliar. Cosina is following the misnomer tradition.

It just goes to show that Zeiss, in naming their lenses Sonnars instead of the more precise "Ernostar" designation, was not the first to commit such a sin. 😛 In fact Zeiss goes a lot further by calling Sonnar-variants "Planars" and vice versa. :bang:
 
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