giellaleafapmu
Well-known
There is a clear benefit to a fixed (non-zoom) lens matched to a sensor. Both can be optimized. Add the fact that both the Coolpix A and GR are a stop slower than the Leica and it seems completely plausible to me.
This is a very common comment on fixed lens cameras but I am not sure that this should be the case. More or less at the beginning of the digital era we were told that one should have the rays of light to hit the sensor at small angle, unlike some of the old wideangle designs. Olympus designed the new (at the time) 4/3 standard with that in mind. For some time Leica told us that a FF to be used with M-mount lenses was not possible, among other thing, for this reason, then they come out with some design including an architecture of the sensor made exactly to overcome this problem. Now Leica talks of "flat pixels" and what not. Even Ricoh in their A12 module claim it is possible to "correct peripheral light and aberration". If anything of this is half-true I don't see why an interchangeable lens camera should be any worst than a fixed lens camera, even with oldish lenses. I can believe it is not possible to build a digital camera which works perfectly with all legacy lenses expecially the ultrawide ones but really at the price point of Leica there should be no excuse for not designing new lenses if anything need changes.
GLF