No hood needed. Although,on my R-D1 I use the 12585 Leica Hood to minimise flaring. But I think the flaring of this lens on the R-D1 may be caused by sensor reflection. As soon as I have the camera back I will test if removing the rear flat piece of glass makes a difference.
No hood needed. Although,on my R-D1 I use the 12585 Leica Hood to minimise flaring. But I think the flaring of this lens on the R-D1 may be caused by sensor reflection. As soon as I have the camera back I will test if removing the rear flat piece of glass makes a difference.
I can mount the hood on the UV filter rim. I only take the filter off in very low light, to avoid ghosting. No, I am not kidding about the rear glass test. It is simply screwed on and it may just add to sensor flare. I don't think the 'float' glass adds anything optically except protection. Any defect on the rear lens will definetely affect the image.
the flat back element is probably for better handling. It makes the lens longer and allows easier focussing and aperture setting.
Compare it with the Nikkor 25/ f4 with the same basical design but misses the flat element
Since the light isn't collimated when going through it, it does have an optical function. It's still bending each wavelength a different amount, so it affects chromatic aberration.
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