[New test photos released] Leica Summicron 35/2 Eight Element copy made in China

In the not so far future everything will be made in China if we like it or not.
The world is changing fast. China's production costs have been steadily on the increase -the US/China trade dispute is also having an impact, and many production platforms are now moving to other, cheaper destinations...i.e. to Vietnam, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka etc...
 
I agree with you, the made in China followed the route of Made in Japan. initially they are poorly made cheapo, but after many years forced transfer technology or whatever the experience they gained during the manufacturing, the quality has improved, such as 7 artisans lenses.
 
I agree with you, the made in China followed the route of Made in Japan. initially they are poorly made cheapio, but after many years forced transfer technology or whatever the experience they gained during the manufacturing, the quality has improved, such as 7 artisans lenses.

Thank you for spreading the positive. 🙂
 
A quick question about the flint glass - is it very soft and on the front element?... I understand that many early Leitz lenses where prone to scratching the front lens.

Regards.

Regarding your question, I just got an answer from the maker. The first batch of the production will use the same material, the same coating, and the same glass. If the original one is prone to scratch, then the replica will have the same characteristics.

So, the replica will have all the characteristics that the original has, which include good or bad. Wish this answered your question.
 
Re: coatings, as I understand it the front and rear surfaces on 60s era Leitz lenses were hard coated and the internal surfaces were soft coated. My own 50mm Summicron rigid has perfect coatings on the front and rear surfaces which surprised me considering all the reports of soft coatings on that particular lens.
 
I'm enjoying this thread...I have an original Wetzler 1:2/35 Summicron 8 element purchased at a camera store on consignment up in Santa Fe .They wanted $250.00 but all I had was $235.00. (cash)They called the owner and he ok'd the deal.This was 1997, I often wonder if Chris was working and going to school up there back then. Anyway if you guys can get a copy go for it. The lens is superb. Regards,Bill. ps I didn't know anything about it,I just wanted a 35 for my M2......I lucked out
 
Infinity Focus Performance Comparison: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph

Infinity Focus Performance Comparison: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph

Infinity Focus Performance Comparison: 8-element Replica VS 35mm f2 Summicron-M Asph

Leica M9

Aperture: F/2 wide open



Note: The weather is a little bit hazy... 35mm f2 ASPH is 6-bit coded. Therefore, its vignetting is automatically corrected on the digital M camera.



Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr

Infinity Performance: 8-element Replica VS 35/2 Asph by Kevin-Xu, on Flickr
 
This is great because it provides access to quality of a photographic tool that was out of the budget of many, previously. I'm quite excited. As long as the it performs like the Summicron it is copying and sold at a fraction of the price, this is a win for photography. If successful maybe we can get Summilux and Noctilux-quality alternatives at much lower prices.

I don't mind "Made In China" at all if the quality holds up.

I also understand that there is "pride in ownership" in Leica products but IMO later on this will be more due to history and legacy rather than technical and mechanical quality. Chinese manufacturing capability will catch up.

Bravo to the makers of this lens!
 
It will be a difficult choice for some people here; the latest CV Ultron 35/2 versus the copy of the first version Summicron 35/2 (8 elements).

Similar cost. Great lenses.

Which lens is a better buy? Why?
 
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