John Lawrence
Well-known
I'm aware that some Summicrons and Summitars are, but I seem to remember some years ago being told that the 2.8 Summaron had "rare earth elements" in it and was also "hot".
It interests me because I would have thought that these "rare earth elements" would have gone into the faster, more expensive lenses of the day i.e. the 35mm Summicron and Summilux, rather than the slower Summaron which at the time was considered more a lens for amateurs than working pros.
It interests me because I would have thought that these "rare earth elements" would have gone into the faster, more expensive lenses of the day i.e. the 35mm Summicron and Summilux, rather than the slower Summaron which at the time was considered more a lens for amateurs than working pros.
kbg32
neo-romanticist
No, the Summaron 2.8 is not radioactive as far as any information I have on this lens.
John Lawrence
Well-known
Thanks Keith.
It was one of those things I'd heard some years ago and the recent thread on radioactive lenses piqued my curiosity again.
It was one of those things I'd heard some years ago and the recent thread on radioactive lenses piqued my curiosity again.
Share: