Dan States
Established
Zeiss has been making the claim that all Sonnar lenses have focus shift and that we just never noticed it until the ZM because the new ZM is SO darned good it just makes it easier to see. I started thinking about the thousands of images I've made with old Sonnars. WAS this something I just never noticed? I suspected it in my Sonnar F2. (It always seemed sharper at infinity than where I was focusing, but my F1.5 always seemed pretty darned sharp and easy to focus.)
Tonight I decided to see if I could induce visible focus shift in two classic Sonnar lenses. In the end what I found was suprising, but first the details:
I made test shots at full aperture and two stops down on both lenses using table mounted and clamped camera. Both lenses are in outstanding condition and my IIA was serviced by Henry Scherer and it is in near mint condition. I used Plus X film developed in D76. Not the sharpest combo, but it's what I use in the real world and that's what counts.
Results: At 6 feet from the target the Sonnar 1.5 showed no visible shift of focus between F1.5 and 2.8. As expected the lens performance improves but the plane of focus remains fixed enough not to be noted in a 3200dpi scan at 100% magnification.
The Sonnar F2 DID show some shift of focus between F2 and F4. HOWEVER, this shift was not enough to throw the point of focus out of the typical depth of field. In any normal sized print up to say, 12x, you just would not see the effect.
Note that I did these shots at longer distances than we are seeing in most tests on the net because my experiences with the ZM Sonnar indicate it has very visible shift at LONGER distances. Even at 5 meters the ZM Sonnar shift is greater than the standard depth of field.
In the attachements the first two shots are from the 1.5 at full aperture and F2.8. The third is from the Sonnar F2 at F4. The point of focus on all images is the viewfinder of the M6.
Tonight I decided to see if I could induce visible focus shift in two classic Sonnar lenses. In the end what I found was suprising, but first the details:
I made test shots at full aperture and two stops down on both lenses using table mounted and clamped camera. Both lenses are in outstanding condition and my IIA was serviced by Henry Scherer and it is in near mint condition. I used Plus X film developed in D76. Not the sharpest combo, but it's what I use in the real world and that's what counts.
Results: At 6 feet from the target the Sonnar 1.5 showed no visible shift of focus between F1.5 and 2.8. As expected the lens performance improves but the plane of focus remains fixed enough not to be noted in a 3200dpi scan at 100% magnification.
The Sonnar F2 DID show some shift of focus between F2 and F4. HOWEVER, this shift was not enough to throw the point of focus out of the typical depth of field. In any normal sized print up to say, 12x, you just would not see the effect.
Note that I did these shots at longer distances than we are seeing in most tests on the net because my experiences with the ZM Sonnar indicate it has very visible shift at LONGER distances. Even at 5 meters the ZM Sonnar shift is greater than the standard depth of field.
In the attachements the first two shots are from the 1.5 at full aperture and F2.8. The third is from the Sonnar F2 at F4. The point of focus on all images is the viewfinder of the M6.
Attachments
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