The interesting thing about the Hexanon in the center shots is that focus is optimised for f/2 and stopping down progressively softens. Its most likely due to focus shift from spherical aberration (SA) where the rf cam is likely optimised for the resultant focus at f/2. The central sharpness with the Summicron is less than the Hexanon at f/2 but it progressively improves by stopping down and by f/4 indicating the lens' rf cam is optimised for optical focus at f/4 or smaller. The softness at wider apertures maybe the effect of SA induced focus shift. At f/2.8 both lenses are equally sharp indicating a kind of intersection in focus. The slightly better edge performance of the Hexanon may be due to flatter field at infinity but I have other test samples shot at 70" where the Summicron clearly is sharper in the corner than the Hexanon as seen here: http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=711726. The figurines are positioned slightly forward so their rf focus is an exact match to the center target focus.
I noticed a similar loss in sharpness as the Hex stopped down, and I could not explain it--I thought there might be a mistake in the posting. Thanks for the explanation.
From your samples, it looks like the Summicron has better shadow detail (she the shrubs/bushes).
No mistake in the posting, I double checked. I'm 99.99% certain the loss of central sharpness is simply due to focus shift from spherical aberration as described in the excerpts from the Konica technical report on the lens seen here: http://wiki.silvergrain.org/wiki/index.php?title=Konica_Hexar#Hexanon_35mm_f.2F2.0. Except for coating differences, optically the lens is identical to the Hexar AF as evidenced by the lens' block diagrams and MTF charts.
Interestingly, the sharpness of the Summicron and Hexanon are the same if you look at the crops shown below, right of center from the original full frame shot, both at f/4. The Summicron is the left and the Hexanon on the right.
Similarly, sharpness is about the same between the two lenses at f/2 and obviously slightly softer than above. The crops are in the same order as above.
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