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Next lens Leica is likely to update?


guruguhan

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The trend to wanting fast lenses all the time leaves me cold, I can hear the comments about 'creamy bokeh' now, and find it hard to justify all that money on a characteristic of the lens that shows no detail or interest. So how about some slower (smaller) lenses, maybe f/3.5 or f/4 that are instead optimised for using stopped down, and where f/16 or f/22 can be more fully utilised without so much diffraction?

 

Steve

 

Agreed, I'd love a few smaller options, but you're never going to beat diffraction, that's out of their hands.

On the other hand, the 28/2.8, 35/2 and 50/2 are all quite small, I'd like to see a new, smaller 90/2.8 and a 75/2.8, all with E39 filters like the old 90 T-E. Even a 21 SA replacement, so we could go from 21 - 90 all with E39, all small. Lovely.

Michael

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I do think there is a place for lenses which work on the M(240) with Liveview, but not on the film or previous digital M cameras - a focal length longer than 135 (I always found 180 mm a very useful tele range without image stabilisation), a proper macro (maybe an alternative to the MEM 90/4?) and a mid range f/2.8 zoom, say 24-70?

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I do think there is a place for lenses which work on the M(240) with Liveview, but not on the film or previous digital M cameras - a focal length longer than 135 (I always found 180 mm a very useful tele range without image stabilisation), a proper macro (maybe an alternative to the MEM 90/4?) and a mid range f/2.8 zoom, say 24-70?

 

John,

 

What you are wishing for are R lenses!

 

Guy

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John,

 

What you are wishing for are R lenses!

 

Guy

 

Yes, because you always have to open the apperture for focussing.

 

I have built two rings for my 2.8/100 so that I can stop down to a predetermined f: value with one fingertip and without looking.

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Yes, because you always have to open the aperture for focussing.

 

I have built two rings for my 2.8/100 so that I can stop down to a predetermined f: value with one fingertip and without looking.

I had to do this with my first camera, a Zenith E with preset diaphragm (hard to do with moving subjects) -- it seems that Leica have offered an R solution firmly rooted in the 1950s. Was there no possibility of building in some electromagnetic auto-stopdown mechanism into the R-to-M adapter. They managed something far more sophisticated with the Leica S-Adapter that allows the Contax 645 lenses to be used on the S camera.

 

Nick

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