Thank you much! 🙂
Your test confirms pretty well what i thought about sharpness at f/2 but the prices are not the same needless to say.
About focus shift, did you take some pics around f/4?
As you know, focus shift does no appear usually at full aperture and is compensated by DoF at f/8 and slower.
Best.
Welcome, my pleasure! At least, I was able to cross this item out of my task list, it hanged there for an eternity...
🙂
Sharpness: yes, I understand you. "Almost as sharp" is definitely not "as sharp" (especially in the corners, at 100% magnification).
But believe that's not even remotely the reason why I'm yet to "retire" my Cron. My major gripe with the Ultron has to do with the way it renders OOF in the corners (and that has to do with the it renders corners, period.). It's not the "unsharpnes" per se (if I really need to have a flat surface all sharp, I'll probabably be using a tripod and align the camera carefully and I won't be using f2, either, since I'm on tripod. BTW, if I use f2 and I don't align the camera properly, I risk some unsharpness in the corners, just because DOF can be really small in digital - especially when you print large). It's more the way it renders corners that bothers me once in a while. And since I have the Cron...
🙂
Focus shift: I'll try it out. For the kind of photos I use my 28 for, this is usually not a problem. I tend to use it either wide-open or around f8-16 (hyperfocus). Anyway, most the subjects I photograph (people...) have a tendency to move when they shouldn't and I know that most of my unfocused pictures come from either bad focus (my miss, not the lens shift) or they moved (or I moved!).
Not to mention that I get more blurred pictures because my M8 has a VERY hard and gritty shutter release, than blurred pictures because the Ultron is "soft" wide-open or any other limitation (including focus-shift). Even in pictures at f4 or f5.6, I can't be sure of focus shift. I don'y have many at those apertures, BTW, because every stop is critical to be shooting at ISO <= 640 AND speed >= 1/30s. I confess I have some gripes with the M8 rendering above 640 ISO and, although I am able to shoot my M3 at 1/15 without problem and I can get even lower with my Hexar AF, 1/30 seems to be the limit on my M8 (damn the shutter release!!!!!!).
Let me qualify that a bit better: in my normal use with the Ultron, I have yet to see a shot where I am SURE the culprit IS the focus shift (maybe on test shots, I will see!
🙂). Or even better: I don't remember a shot where I could say "Damn! I would have nailed this one with the Cron, because of focus shift!". But I have a few that bring home the question "Damn! Would I get that crazy look in the corner with the Cron?". And lots of them that make me wonder "Why the hell didn't I bring the Epson, that I can shoot at least 1 stop slower without shake?"
😉 Or even "Damn! This week I'll go the extreme route and open my M8 and adjust the shutter release feel!!!" (another nice thread:
http://www.l-camera-forum.com/leica-forum/leica-m8-forum/27130-adjusting-shutter-release-feel.html).
So, at least for me, the question is not "Does it have focus shift?" but "Is the focus shift a problem?". With the 35/1.4, it was. With the 28/2, not yet. And, even if I detect a huge amount of focus shift, that won't change the way it behaves during normal use (normal, here, meaning "the way I typically use it", of course!).
A final confession: given my (not so good) experience with the old Ultron, I was SINCERELY expecting the new Ultron to go the same route as the 35/1.4 Nokton (ie, FedExed back). So, I really had a strong bias against the lens (which proves how much one can suffer from GAS: I have a Cron, I didn't like the Ultron, I buy the new one anyway. Makes sense, huh?
🙂). Surprisingly, I liked it.
Cheers!
PS with all this stuff, all I could manage was to totally impair my ability to sell my old Ultron here in RFF... Should have kept the old Ultron photos private... eheheheh