sockeyed
Well-known
I was curious about the question of close focusing using FSU lenses on my Bessa R3A. Because of a slightly different back-focus distance, it has been suggested that Jupiters and Industars do not always focus correctly on non-FSU cameras.
So I set up a very simple test. I took a couple of objects and placed them about 1m from my camera, put my camera on a tripod and focused using the rangefinder in my R3A. I metered using an incident hand-held meter and released the shutter with a cable release. The images are all shot on HP4 developed in Rodinal 1:50, and scanned at 3200dpi on my Minolta Dual Scan IV. I did no correction to the images to give an idea of contrast of the different lenses. I will post one image of the entire shot to give an idea of bokeh, etc, and one crop of the centre @ 100% to show whether or not the focus is correct, and also to give an idea of the resolution. I shot each lens wide open and at 4 or 5.6.
The lenses:
CV Nokton 40/1.4
Jupiter-8 50/2 black (1977)
Jupiter-8 50/2 silver (1961)
Industar-61 52/2.8 ('panda')
Canon Serenar 50/1.8
CV Skopar 75/2.5
So I set up a very simple test. I took a couple of objects and placed them about 1m from my camera, put my camera on a tripod and focused using the rangefinder in my R3A. I metered using an incident hand-held meter and released the shutter with a cable release. The images are all shot on HP4 developed in Rodinal 1:50, and scanned at 3200dpi on my Minolta Dual Scan IV. I did no correction to the images to give an idea of contrast of the different lenses. I will post one image of the entire shot to give an idea of bokeh, etc, and one crop of the centre @ 100% to show whether or not the focus is correct, and also to give an idea of the resolution. I shot each lens wide open and at 4 or 5.6.
The lenses:
CV Nokton 40/1.4
Jupiter-8 50/2 black (1977)
Jupiter-8 50/2 silver (1961)
Industar-61 52/2.8 ('panda')
Canon Serenar 50/1.8
CV Skopar 75/2.5
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