BernardC Posted September 23 Share #61 Posted September 23 Advertisement (gone after registration) 11 hours ago, Archiver said: I wonder if this means that each new sensor/camera - for example M10 vs M10R vs M11, and SL2 vs SL2S vs SL3 - requires different and separate sets of Leica lens corrections. Yes. Also, Zeiss used to publish different 6-bit codes for different ZM lenses (M8, M9, M-240). 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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Stuart Richardson Posted September 23 Share #62 Posted September 23 20 hours ago, Archiver said: I wonder if this means that each new sensor/camera - for example M10 vs M10R vs M11, and SL2 vs SL2S vs SL3 - requires different and separate sets of Leica lens corrections. I think Reid Reviews gets into this. Different M cameras have different degrees of shading correction. It is not just an issue with vignetting, but also with cyan drift. I am not a subscriber at the moment, but it seems likely that Leica does need to adapt the corrections to each new model. But my guess is that some smart person there has figured out a way to do it via some sort of data transfer, rather than needing to retest every lens they have ever coded on every body. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Photoworks Posted September 23 Share #63 Posted September 23 20 hours ago, Archiver said: I wonder if this means that each new sensor/camera - for example M10 vs M10R vs M11, and SL2 vs SL2S vs SL3 - requires different and separate sets of Leica lens corrections. M11, SL2, SL3 all have different results with the same lens You see the differances mostly in the wide-angle lenses, as they need the most corrections 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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