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Leica Elpro-D E69


hbldds

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Carlos,

 

Thanks for doing your test and posting the results. It appears from your pictures above that the Elpro-D has better resolution than the LC-69 and therefore reveals more detail. The Elpro-D appears slightly warmer than the LC-69 too.

 

It's interesting to note that at f/11 the LC-1's definition is limited by diffusion and the pictures from both lenses are softer than those at f/5.6.

 

Pete.

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Things are busy here on my side and, to be honest, this kind of testing is so boring to do! :D I feel pity for the preview guys.

 

I will try to put something together over the weekend,

 

I think you should go do something you like to do. This has become somewhat of a moot point IMO. ;) Go have some fun.

 

JT

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It's interesting to note that at f/11 the LC-1's definition is limited by diffusion and the pictures from both lenses are softer than those at f/5.6.

 

Pete.

 

Hi Pete,

 

I was surprised by this finding as well! I was intrigued by that and I don't really understand why that happens, technically speaking.

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Hi Pete,

 

I was surprised by this finding as well! I was intrigued by that and I don't really understand why that happens, technically speaking.

 

Funny.... while I have no idea of why this is.... but personally, I find the sweet spot on the Digilux 2 to be at f/5.6. I do shoot f/8 on occasion.. but for the most part I'm not that fond of shooting at f/11 - I keep an ND filter with me all the time.

 

JT

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Hi Pete,

 

I was surprised by this finding as well! I was intrigued by that and I don't really understand why that happens, technically speaking.

Carlos,

 

I notice now that I wrote "diffusion" but I meant diffraction.:o

 

As light rays pass close to the edges of the diaphragm they bend slightly. So at the focal point, rays that don't pass close to the edge of the diaphragm will focus in round dots which produces a sharp image but dispersion of the light rays that pass close to the edge of the diaphragm will focus in fuzzier dots and produce a softer image.

 

At wider aperture values the softness caused by diffraction is less noticeable because the proportion of light passing close to the edge of the diaphragm is small compared to the volume of light passing through the aperture. But at small apertures the proportion of diffracted light to the volume of light passing through the diaphragm is much larger so the diffraction effect becomes more visible.

 

Pete.

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Does D2 has zone AF? Where you can select where to focus? This has spring to my mind seeing Carlos photo has focus on the tip of the screwdriver.

 

 

Cheers

Vlad

Vlad,

 

Yes, by focussing on an object in the centre of the vf with the shutter release half-pressed, holding the half-press and recomposing.

 

Pete.

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Vlad,

 

Yes, by focussing on an object in the centre of the vf with the shutter release half-pressed, holding the half-press and recomposing.

 

Pete.

 

Ahh i see, now i get it! Thanks for the tip Pete.

 

 

Cheers

Vlad

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Carlos,

 

I notice now that I wrote "diffusion" but I meant diffraction.:o

 

As light rays pass close to the edges of the diaphragm they bend slightly. So at the focal point, rays that don't pass close to the edge of the diaphragm will focus in round dots which produces a sharp image but dispersion of the light rays that pass close to the edge of the diaphragm will focus in fuzzier dots and produce a softer image.

 

At wider aperture values the softness caused by diffraction is less noticeable because the proportion of light passing close to the edge of the diaphragm is small compared to the volume of light passing through the aperture. But at small apertures the proportion of diffracted light to the volume of light passing through the diaphragm is much larger so the diffraction effect becomes more visible.

 

Pete.

 

Pete,

 

Thank you so much for the thorough explanation. Really helpful!

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