ffttklackdedeng said:What does 85% Field of View mean? That the frames show 85% of the image area?
joachim said:Yes, that is what it means. This value is very much standard in the rangefinder business (Leica, CV). The Contax G offered 90% at infinity though.
Pant, pant pant!! 😀 Me too. I have a cracking 28/2.8 M-Hexanon that needs a good rear lens cap! And I have the Leica 24/2.8 too... I'm seriously thinking of breaking my normal (wait & see) rule and being an early adopter. Maybe if I make a trip to NYC and buy it from Rich Pinto so there's no shipping... 😉 😎ferider said:Thanks for posting this.
I love the fact that the 28mm frame line is isolated.
Roland.
dazedgonebye said:Does anyone know at what aperture the R4A will be able to focus the 75mm lens? f2.5? f2.8? f4?
How about a 50mm lens? f1.5? f2? f2.8?
ferider said:The EBL is almost identical to the Leica CL. So I assume 50/2 is OK, and {90,75}/4 as well. But, YMMV.
Roland.
ferider said:Steve, I'm quite conservative wrt EBL - too much coffee I guess. Some people use 50/1.5 and 90/2.8 successfully on the CL. Also if you have a bit more subject distance (like 2 vs 1m), it will become much easier.
Think about it this way: due to its crop factor, the RD-1 gets close to the R4 EBL. There are many reports about fast lens use on the RD-1.
Roland.
ffttklackdedeng said:What does 85% Field of View mean? That the frames show 85% of the image area?
ferider said:Problem with RFs is that the viewfinder FOV is constant, while the lens FOV changes (focal length gets longer) when focusing closer. So the frameline is usually adjusted to be accurate at some distance, like 1 or 3m. I believe it's 1m for Bessas (100% coverage) which leads to a < 100% coverage at
infinity.