- That particular Nikkor 50/1.8 in my picture is very well built, actually.
- If you read
http://photo.net/leica-rangefinders-forum/00Xqaq, for instance, you'll see that some Leica lenses are built quite cheaply, which doesn't make them cheaper in the used market (the "bokeh king" runs north of US 1500 these days, used).
- Or compare the Noctilux 50/1.0 in your table to the Nokton 50/1.1, price difference is not justified by performance, arguably the Nokton is technically better.
- Checkout prices of the LTM Ultron 35/1.7, used today, vs. new when it came out. Why did it's value increase over the few years of its lifetime ? Is it well built ?
I'm the last to tell anybody not to buy a lens, however expensive - that's up to the buyer and none of my business. My point is that one can not in a general way correlate price to performance and/or build quality.
Digital Leicas and full-frame mirror-less have only driven M/LTM lens prices up because there is more demand. Basic capitalism.
Roland.
Hi Roland,
TY for link. It shows that not every M lens is as nicely put together as others. I think when a generalization is involved there are going to be exceptions, and I'm sure that's not the only one.
Prices for M/LTM lens rise and fall independently. 35 FLE 28Cron 50Lux Asph and many others are way down. 75 Lux 8-element cron 50 DR and others seem quite steady.
The M9 is actually going up, or so it seems LOL.
You are right, the essential element is demand, and that's based on multiple factors. You can bet prices would be higher if the Stock Sony A7 cameras shot M wides better.
But I think the fundamentals basically stand overall. The M lenses are very compact, generally good in performance and construction, the mount is alive and well, and many of these lenses were made in limited numbers. Less than 2000 Canon LTM 85/1.5 lenses made. The 85/1.8 also not many, and these are not even the rare ones.
As I noted above there are beautiful SLR lenses. Yours may well be one.
🙂
Happy New Year to you and all the best.
PS I was checking the other thread on the same lens, one that had been dropped in 2011
http://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/167432-summicron-35-mm-in-pieces/
No excuse for the bad build but this guy, at the urging of several members, did send in the old lens and for a fee Leica completely rebuilt it, so though it cost some money, the guy ended up with a brand new "king of bokeh" which is probably worth a little extra.
I pmed him:
"They fixed the 35/2 and send it back as new. Communication with Leica was perfect. It cost me about 700 euro's but sold it for much more."
Try that after you drop an old Rokkor
😉
Thanks to you Roland, I will be avoiding that particular M lens, unless I can buy the "new" one. And there are others with plastic as well. Caveat Emptor
🙂