Canon Serenar 50/1.8 is it as good as

raid

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the following non-Serenar 50/1.8 by Canon? I have read many good things about the 50/1.8 by Canon, and I support those statements. I wonder whether the Serenar design was the same as the following 50 lens.
 
From what I've read, the various versions were all optically the same. However, I'd love a "hands on" answer as I begin looking for one I can afford ... (yo, Rocinante, see that giant? Charge!)

🙂

Willism
 
I too believe optically the 50/1.8 lenses are identical. I kept a chrome one because I like the look of it more than the later Canon lenses.
 
Optically, supposed to be the same. I like the build of the early chrome ones better than the later Black lenses. The Chrome lenses have a taper that helps clear the viewfinder, later Black ones will block a Leica finder.
 
I like my chrome Serenar becuase it feels rock solid and looks cool on a Canon body. I did not know if it is optically the same as the black ones.
 
Here is the Canon lens page (go to the S-Mount 50-85mm page)

According to the above link there are some very minor differences, like # of apeture blades. My recently acquired 50/1.8 II has a different coating color (?) from my chrome 50/1.8. The chrome is blue, while the II is yellow. I don't know what effect that'll have, if any (just mentioning a visual difference). I haven't owned either long enough to do a direct comparison, but I'm looking forward to it!

🙂
 
RayPA said:
Here is the Canon lens page (go to the S-Mount 50-85mm page)

According to the above link there are some very minor differences, like # of apeture blades. My recently acquired 50/1.8 II has a different coating color (?) from my chrome 50/1.8. The chrome is blue, while the II is yellow. I don't know what effect that'll have, if any (just mentioning a visual difference). I haven't owned either long enough to do a direct comparison, but I'm looking forward to it!

🙂

Ray: The website you gave above shows differences in the number of aperture blades and also minimum aperture. I guess, the more blades, the more circular the closing and the better the bokeh. Am I right here? The Sernear only closes down to f16 whereas the Version I (after Serenar) closes down to f22 and then Version II went back to f16, with a lower price for Version II.
 
raid amin said:
Ray...I guess, the more blades, the more circular the closing and the better the bokeh. Am I right here?

Raid, I'd agree with the former, the higher number of blades would result in a more smooth circular-shaped apeture. However, regarding the latter, I would think that there is more to better bokeh, than just apeture blades. I've seen some very nice OOF areas in images made with a Canonet, which has an aperture shape that is closer to a pentagon, than a circle.

🙂
 
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My chrome Serenar 50/1.8 only click stops on full f-stops (4, 5.6, 8, etc), and not half-stops (although you can set it between clicks if you want). I'm not sure if the later lenses are like this.
 
lens formulas

lens formulas

All the 50/1.8's are modified Gauss type, and the same formula. The barrel changed from chrome/brass to black, and the name changed from Serenar to Canon, but the glass is the same. This is one of the classics, IMHO. It sits on the front of a number of Leicas, and performs better than most lens that are 50+ years old.
I don't know what factors have gone into the recent rise in prices, but I remember not too far back when I bought near mint for well under $100.... I doubt that we will see that again, if things stay reasonable (fingers crossed).
Harry
 
I used the Serenar a few days ago with good results. The lens feels rock solid and the optics look still great. You mentioned a Gauss design (above). Is it more like a Sonnar or more like a Planar or ...?
 
I have a chrome 1.8/50mm too (as well as the 1.5/50mm - quite identical mounting - heavyweight!)
Yes there are differences in coating (the "Blue" - similar to the Nikkor blue - ist the earliest. The Canon-brown is later; I think since 1955)
I don't care much about number of aperture blade. Roundness is rather a question of form of blades than of their number. It needs more for good bokeh than high number of aperture blades. Wide open is a perfect circle for every lens, but not all have good bokeh.
The Canon 1.8/50 isn't the sharpest wide open - Zeiss always offered the 1-2=2-1 Planar only with f/2.0 maximum aperture, which is more realistic - but at f/5.6 it is a very solid performer. The 1.5/50 has a 1-3=3 configutation (Sonnar)
Maybe the 1.8/50 offers the best value for money of all CANON RF lenses. The well reputated 1.4/50mm was developed out of the 1.8 and has a very similar configuration. Never seen a direct compariosn 1.8-1.4 picture by picture. I believe the 1.8/50 isn't much worse, if any...

cheers, Frank
some diagrams of Planar-Sonnar here:
http://www.taunusreiter.de/Cameras/Canon_RF_e.html
scroill down to Race for the fastest
http://www.taunusreiter.de/Cameras/Biotar.html
 
More recently, the 50/1.8 has been receiving praises on photography websites. It is, as you said above, a good buy overall.
 
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