aizan
Veteran
when does the focus shift become an issue on the m8? f2 and minimum focus...?
when does the focus shift become an issue on the m8? f2 and minimum focus...?
One reason that Leica have moved towards using aspherical elements is to minimise spherical aberration, which also minimises focus shift. The C-V lens shows some spherical aberration and therefore focus shift. For many uses, no problem. You can also learn to get around it. 'Sharpness' is over rated, after all.
Marty
when does the focus shift become an issue on the m8? f2 and minimum focus...?
"lovely"....ok.
These threads seems to happen every time Sean Reid does a review and every time it must be pointed out that he only does his reviews on the M8, unless you plan on using this lens on an M8 then his reviews are of little benefit to you. Every time these threads start someone says that a bad review from Sean Reid will effect sales, it will not in any way shape or form, I think to much credit is placed on the power of his reviews and the amount of people that actually pay for them to which not many film only users would bother subscribing. Toms reviews always hold far more real world film relevance and they are free. The lens does not have focus shift on any film camera for which this lens was designed. Great lens, great value
Every time these threads start someone says that a bad review from Sean Reid will effect sales, it will not in any way shape or form, I think to much credit is placed on the power of his reviews and the amount of people that actually pay for them to which not many film only users would bother subscribing. Toms reviews always hold far more real world film relevance and they are free. The lens does not have focus shift on any film camera for which this lens was designed. Great lens, great value
I don't subscribe to his site, but I would guess that he mounts the camera to a tripod when conducting the tests, correct?
Depth of field at 3 feet for a 28mm lens at f/2.0 is roughly 4 inches. However, I suppose that if your point of focus is at the near point or rear point of the depth of field, then you wouldn't have any margin for error.
The lens does not have focus shift on any film camera for which this lens was designed.
Focus shift occurs independantly of the camera; it is an optical property of lenses. It may or may not be significant for use on film cameras, but without relevant testing we can't tell.
Marty
T. Every time these threads start someone says that a bad review from Sean Reid will effect sales, it will not in any way shape or form.
Here's an interesting page that I linked in the review: http://www.vanwalree.com/optics/spherical.html