Ray Nalley
Well-known
Well, a lot of folks are talking about being able to use their existing lenses on it. I'm not sure buying a completely new system with new lenses is what they have in mind.
Focusing would have to be either scale or 'live view' in the absence of a coupled rangefinder. Scale is probably more accurate.
As for the lenses - Sigma has a 24/1.8 and Panasonic has a 25/1.4 in 4/3rds mount. The former costs around $400 while the latter is about twice as much. Both are roughly around the price of a 4/3rds body. The former also covers the 35mm image circle. The hope is that these lenses can be made significantly smaller now. I do not see why this should suddenly increase the price. Indeed they ought to be able to use simpler designs and make them considerably cheaper.Of course an ultra-fast wide lens would work superbly with 4/3 -- but what are the chances of a 21/1.4? And what would it cost if they did make one? Especially if it could cover full frame as well?
That said, it makes plenty of sense to buy lenses that cost more than the body - indeed I imagine a rather large number of people here use Leica M lenses on Bessas. Every digital SLR manufacturer currently follows this model as well and it seems to work all right for them.Does it make sense to ask for a camera body that needs lenses costing significantly more than the body?
Whats the difference between a 14mm lens that behaves as a 28mm, compared to a 28mm that behaves as a 28mm? micro4/3 lenses are going to be all new; so you buy the focal lenght you need.
Of course an ultra-fast wide lens would work superbly with 4/3 -- but what are the chances of a 21/1.4?
I must be missing something in all this discussion about a focal length "multiple". If the sensor is smaller, and since this is a NEW system altogether, why can't lenses be manufactured so that they would be small enough to NOT require the "21mm F1.4" kind of (apparently difficult) design ? I would have thought smaller lenses would only add to the attractiveness of this whole system.
Perhaps someone can enlighten me.
Subhash 🙁
Again, depth of field. Wide is certainly possible, but what use would a 11/2.8 lens be? You'd have near endless depth of field wide open, leading to boring images as everything would always be in focus. Smaller brings with it a sameness of look that I'd tire of pretty quick- even for snapshots.
I am sorry, but again. Why can't there be the same DOF as the larger systems, if one is , in fact shrinking everything ?
We'd need a 14/.095 lens to get close to a 28/2.8 right?
Website dpreview.com quotes the Press statement, which states that the Micro FourThirds system will aim for a smaller than 'Regular' FourThirds sensor.😀
No, you'd need a 14mm/1.4. The crop factor works on depth of field the same way it does on angle of view. A 50mm 1.4 would be a 25mm 0.7 in the new format.
I expect that if the new format really allows for lenses of the same focal length and max aperture at half the size, then there will be plenty of options that offer acceptable depth of field. It'll never be the same, but that's one of the trade-offs with a lower cost system.
I fully expect Leica to be Panasonic's partner in this, but further, I think that if they're smart, they'll jump in with both feet. Every lensmaker in the world seems to have one cash cow or another, and the truly successful companies have lower-cost bodies and lenses galore. If Leica developed a high quality body with Panasonic and a full complement of quality optics, the thing'd sell a ton. More people want "a Leica" than can afford one, and that exculsivity isn't helping them out financially. A thoroughly top-notch Leica body with lenses could offer something to such consumers and inject more revenue into Leica, allowing them to take the risks they need to take in order to get the M-Digital truly off the ground. And I'm not talking about budget-class product here. A $1500 body and $400-$800 primes would sell like mad to a class of consumer that's willing to spend the same or more on Canon and Nikon, but would rather have a Leica, but cannot afford $1500 a lens. The market exists for Leica, and as far as I'm concerned, they stand to gain more than Panasonic or Olympus if they want to.
I say: Digilux 4 (or a new name) with a new set of small 12mm/2.8, 18mm/2.0, 25mm/1.4, 35mm/1.4 could do some great business. Leica needs a product that sells in volume; this could be it.
Website dpreview.com quotes the Press statement, which states that the Micro FourThirds system will aim for a smaller than 'Regular' FourThirds sensor.
Yes I quite like the thought of my 40/1.4 becoming a short portrait lens.So, it'll be useless for RF photography, with the use of an adapter all your longer-than-35mm lenses would turn to tele lenses, shallow DOF would become completely impossible,
you'd have a manual P&S with Leica glass on it, what a waste.
Why do you think any product with a limited production would be significantly cheaper than the RD1 was at launch?I honestly can't see any good come from it. Our best bet is finding someone personally interested in RF photography at the controls of a big company to invest in a digital RF with MF lenses.
tmfabian, indeed
If one wants fov 50mm. so one has to buy 24mm 2.8 which are generally expensive. So you cannot have 50 fov at f1.4 🙂
of course the 4:3 requires own lenses but they are still bulky as hell. Compare that with old Elmar 3.5 🙂