LTM collapsible Summicron 50/2 - info please

hoot

green behind the ears
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Hi,

does anyone have experience with the screw-mount collapsible Summicron 50/2? (Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe there is only one version, made in 1953, and discontinued when the M3 came out in 1954).

Specifically, I'd like to know the following:

* Is it at all coated?
* How susceptible is it to flare? Can I forget about shooting in backlight?
* Can sharpness/resolution compare to later M-mount Summicrons, or is it considered a soft lens?
* Can the bokeh compare to later M-mount Summicrons?
* What filter thread does it have?
* Does it have any provisions for attaching a hood, except by means of the filter mount? What hood would you especially recommend?
* Is the lens fully rangefinder-coupled when mounted on a Leica M via the LTM-to-M adapter?
* How much is this lens usually worth in fine user condition?

Thanks! If there's anything else noteworthy you can think of, please let me know!
 
The Summicron is coated; but the coating on the original is a bit soft and susceptible to cleaning marks.

Flare: My type I rigid is generally free from flare, but best to avoid using with sunlight illuminating the glass directly. It is less flare-prone than the Nikkor 5cm F1.4.

39mm Filter Thread.

It is fully RF coupled on LTM lcameras or with an M camera via the adapter. The lens was available in M-Mount as well.

This lens goes in the $300 range with clean glass and decent condition. $400 for a great example. I have seen them with "blown" front elements go for $100. I want one of those to send to ARAX.
 
the bokeh is also smoother than the later summicrons. not as sharp and contrasty wide open, pretty much the same as you stop down.
 
If you need to ask..... it'll be the best thing you've ever seen.

The only thing that is noticably better is a new one,

or a new Summilux (not an old one), 50mm, or 75mm especially,

It will out perform anything else if you do a 20x enlargement,

although some others, (nikon, canon, planars, elmars, ?tessars), are contrasy and look good on small prints,

it will fairly easily outperform current film and scanners.

If you want a sigificantly better image you have use medium or large format because the film is the limiting factor.
 
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