healyzh
Well-known
I had an interesting time tonight testing out 50mm lenses on my M9. Shooting wide open, should a Jupiter-8 f/2 and a Summitar f/2 beat a collapsable v1 Summicron? The only lens to beat the Summitar was the v4 Summicron, but the Jupiter-8 came quite close to beating it.
On a related note, all 3 Summar's performed different, as did both Nikkor-S.C f/1.4's.
In terms of quality (Nikkors at f/1.4, everything else at f/2):
1. Summicron v4
2. Summitar
3. Jupiter-8 (this is shocking as I didn't expect it to focus so well)
4. Summicron v1 (this is shocking as its a beautiful lens)
5. Nikkor-S.C. f/1.4 #1
6. Nikkor-S.C. f/1.4 #2
7. Summar #1
8. Summar #2 (Coated, and the image seemed a lot brighter)
9. Summar #3
Method of testing was shooting a printed out chart hanging from a bookcase. The combination of part of the chart, a book spin, and the piece of paper telling what the lens was were in the center of the image, this is the part I checked. I then Pixel peeped at 100% in Adobe Lightroom 3. Not the most scientific test, but I found it educational.
On a related note, all 3 Summar's performed different, as did both Nikkor-S.C f/1.4's.
In terms of quality (Nikkors at f/1.4, everything else at f/2):
1. Summicron v4
2. Summitar
3. Jupiter-8 (this is shocking as I didn't expect it to focus so well)
4. Summicron v1 (this is shocking as its a beautiful lens)
5. Nikkor-S.C. f/1.4 #1
6. Nikkor-S.C. f/1.4 #2
7. Summar #1
8. Summar #2 (Coated, and the image seemed a lot brighter)
9. Summar #3
Method of testing was shooting a printed out chart hanging from a bookcase. The combination of part of the chart, a book spin, and the piece of paper telling what the lens was were in the center of the image, this is the part I checked. I then Pixel peeped at 100% in Adobe Lightroom 3. Not the most scientific test, but I found it educational.