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kenneth

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Hello

 

I have just become a member of this forum. I spent many years in the wilderness using Nikon, Pentax and Olympus. During the 80,s I owned a R3 MOT and later that decade an M3 but for some reason or other gravitated back to Nikon. Yesterday I finally came to my senses and bought a R9 with a 50mm Summicron F2 and a 28/ 70mm 3.5/4.5. I must say that I am very pleased with my purchases, all second hand, of course but in mint condition. At last I will be able to view transparencies taken with my R8 on my much cherished Pradovit projector. One question if I may. I noticed that the 28/ 70mm 3.5/4.5 Vario Elmar-R lens is stamped Made in Japan for Leica. I assumed that all Leica R lenses were German. Can someone elaborate on this matter please?

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Hi Kenneth

 

Welcome to the forum.

 

Have a look at:

Leica Forum: Leica vs Canon zoomlens

- Vario-Elmar-R 28-70mm f3.5-4.5 (made by Sigma, Japan)

 

Leica Vario-Elmar-R F3.5/4.5 28-70 lens: Good? - Photo.net Leica and Rangefinders Forum

The first version of this lens (3-cam, pull-out hood, 1990) was made for Leica by Sigma and used Sigma's design and glass.

It was released along with the R-E body and for a time it was sold as a kit.

 

Leica Camera - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Leica 28-70 mm f/3.5-f/4.5 Vario-Elmar-R zoom (Sigma design)

 

Hope this is some help.

 

Looking forward to see your pictures.

 

All the best,

Ruben

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Thank you for the welcome and links to discussions on the 28/70 zoom Lenses. If I read you right I think it would seem that I would be better of not bothering with the zoom and opting for the other option available to me, namely, swapping the 28/70 for a 28mm 2.8 primary lens. In fact I have never been a fan of zoom lenses in the past from any manufacturer, or in-fact, just sticking with the 50mm Summicron F2 that came with the camera?

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Hi Kenneth, welcome to the forum.

 

The 50mm Summicron is a cracking lens, as is the 28mm you mention. I can't imagine you being disappointed with one.

 

A group of us in the North had a get together last weekend, it's a pity you weren't here then, since if you could have made it to the gathering I could have let you borrow my 28mm for the afternoon.

 

Leica lenses for the R system are a bit of a bargain at the moment, and you can't really go wrong with any of the primes. 28mm and 50mm would make a good combination.

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Dear David and Steven

 

Thank you for you kind comments. Following my original comments on the 28/70mm zoom neither of you commented on that lens. Am I to read in that, that like me you are not a fan of zoom lenses. I am thinking of taking it back for a refund and then waiting for a while before I add any more lenses. As you said Steven the 50mm Summicron, I am sure it will be a cracking lens. Also, I realise that this might sound a little silly but I feel a bit of a poser walking around with a zoom lens on my camera.

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Am I to read in that, that like me you are not a fan of zoom lenses.

 

I've got an M with a 50mm lens, so haven't got an opinion on the zoom.

Generally I prefer fixed focal lengths, although I'm happy to use zooms on my dSLR (Olympus E-1).

 

It sounds like you've talked yourself into the 28 and 50mm primes – I can't see you being disappointed with them.

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Kenneth

 

A warm welcome to the Forum.

 

It is probably true to say that the 28 -70 zoom is a bit less highly regarded than the current 35-70 or the current 28-90. These things are relative though - the main problem with the 28-70 is (I understand) a significant degree of geometrical distortion at the wide end.

 

I don't think people are prejudiced against the zooms per se - the new 28-90 is really excellent, and is my travel lens of choice, and the 21-35 is my wide-angle of choice when I don't need the aperture of my 35/1.4 or the specialised scope of my 28/2.8PC.

 

Give the 28-70 a go and see how you like it.

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Kenneth,

 

I've had both the 28-70 that you have and the 28-90. The 28-70 is pretty good lens by most people's standards. Yes, there's some barrel distortion at the wide end, but otherwise, it's pretty good. The 28-90 is better, but it costs 2-3 x the money.

 

Enjoy your new camera.

 

Charlie

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