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T3 cut corners


MTC Photography

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Martin,

 

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I also like lenses that use lots of blades. One of my Leica M lenses

has 11 blades. I think that is a record. The Konica Hexar RF lenses

all have 10 since the Japanese love bokeh.

 

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Having more blades makes out of focus lights look roundish and is

much nicer for the overall bokeh.

 

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So why do some manufacturers use less blades? I don't know. My TVSIII

has 5 blades too! While my old TVS has 7. All my Mamiya 7 lenses have

only 5 blades too! I have seen a $7000 Hasslelblad lens, which is

their sharpest. It is the Zeiss Superachromat 350mm f5.6. That too

has only 5 blades! And they say it is great for portraits that blur

the background. Yet it has a terrible bokeh. Why did Zeiss put on 5

blades on their top of the line lens?

 

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Anyway I thought 5 blades was the minimum, until today I say a Minox

35 GTE, which has TWO blades!!! Wow!

 

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Mike

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The reason for the small number of blades on Hasselblad lenses, and

other single lens reflexes, is for speed of operation. More blades =

more friction, making it difficult for the iris to close fast enough

for SLR operation. This is especially important on wide aperture

and long lenses with their large iris openings.<br>If you've ever

operated a large process lens with 12 or 13 blades, you'll know

how that friction builds up!<p>I believe (I might well be wrong) that

the Minox, like many compacts, has a 'shutterture', where the shutter

and iris are combined. At higher shutter speeds, the two shutter

blades are only partly pulled open, leaving a diamond shaped aperture

formed by two 'V' notches in the blades. In this way; one simple

timing circuit can control both the aperture and the shutter speed

over a wide range of exposure settings.

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Pete,

 

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I can understand your agrument about the speed. But as you said that

would apply to SLR's only. In other cameras the aperture does not

move unless you change it.

 

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So my argument still applies to the Contax T3, TVSIII, Mamiya 7, etc..

 

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As for the Minox 35, no the two blade thing is not the shutter. Since

as you move the aperture ring you can control the two blades and see

the aperture open and close, while behind it you can see the shutter

clearly.

 

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Mike

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Kyocera claimed that 7 blades of T2 was 'computer designed' to

give near round shape. Why T3 reduced the blades ?

Yes, older camera has more blades. My 80 years plus Goerz Tenax

6x9 Dogmar lens has ten blades. In out of focus area, five

blade lens generate pentagram shape blur

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Thanks Mike. I did say that I might well be wrong about the Minox. I

didn't know you had manual control of the aperture on that model. I

thought the GT series were all auto-exposure.<br>BTW, I've just seen a

CCTV camera lens with a 3 bladed aperture!<br>I'm not convinced

about this 'bokeh' crap. It might be interesting to drop some wierd

shaped waterhouse stops into one of my old process lenses, to see

exactly what effect the shape of aperture has. However, with the price

of 5x4 film, I'd have to get a bit more curious than I am at the

moment, or make an adapter for 35mm.

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Pete,

 

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Regardless if you believe in the bokeh "crap", you cannot deny the

fact that any out of focus bright point WILL appear as a triangle in

a 3 bladed diaphram or as pentagon in a 5 bladed diaphram. Ideally it

should appear as a circle. If not then as close to it as possible.

 

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Look at our eyes, it is the best aperture! Fully round no matter what

it is stopped down to!

 

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Anyway I for sure DO like more blades.

 

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Mike

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Minox 35 camera indeed has two blades. However, the two 'blades"

has V shape cut out, so that two of them forms a diamond shape with

four sides, only one side lens then five blade diaphrams-- quite

a smart design.

<p> Nothing beat Waterhouse stops-- simply perfect round holes

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Mike. I'm short sighted, so I only need to take off my spectacles to

see out-of-focus highlights. Otherwise, I find it extremely difficult

to look directly at something and throw it out of focus.<br>Anyway,

what I see with the naked eye when I look at a defocused specular

highlight, is not a nicely round gaussian blob, but little radial

sparkles, something like spiral-galaxy arms. Sometimes there is a halo

effect, which changes as I blink, and this is all due to the liquid

film covering my eye.<br>In other words, it's actually nothing like

the nice circular 'bokeh' that someone has decided that a lens ought

to exhibit.<p>Photography has been practised for over 150 years, and

during that time, a huge number of wonderful pictures has been taken.

No-one, to date, has ever looked at a great photograph and said "This

would have been a masterpiece, ...if only the bokeh of the lens had

been better."<br>That's why I say 'bokeh' is crap.

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T2 was not designed by Porsche Design only the original.

Bokeh surely is more important for longer lenses 50mm+ than a

wide angle lens? Adding to the original question; another

observatin is the T3 also has a lot more plastic, with a plastic

'chassis' . Feature wise it has compensated by adding in extra

features for those it removed from the T2, so on balance the T3

is better endowed?

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  • 1 month later...

Contax has cut some pretty good corners to include the improvements of

smaller size, sharper lens with no vignetting, faster shutter speed

and more user customizable functions than the T2 or just about any

other P&S available.

 

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Poplar Photography calls it the sharpest P$S that they have ever

tested. I love the bokeh in the images rendered by mine. Havn't

noticed any pentagrams.

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  • 1 month later...

Ok folks... What's the hooooopla about the ceramic pressure plate on

the T2???

 

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The T2 is NOT designed by FA Porsche Design group, though it does

show lines originated in the T. I too admire the design of the T2 and

may even collect one for the hell of it, but I must say... Contax did

a wonderful job with the T3. I like better than my G1, which isn't

easy on the eye. ;~}

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We all know that Leica, Contax and other cameras are made by German

elves from the Black Forest.

 

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In the case of Contax, these elves have Japanese work permits, and

work in the ancient cultural capital of Kyoto in Japan. Reports

indicate that the elf responsible for the Contax T3 has been deported

back to Germany, where he will be duly beaten by Santa Claus with a

birch stick.

 

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Footnote: As you all know, according to the legend, in Germany, Santa

whacks naughty kids on Christmas day, he saves the lumps of coal for

other countries. Come to think of it he doesn't even look like the

jolly Claus he is in America, more like a grumpy, thin old fella whom

it is best to steer clear of. Nevertheless, he will give us Leicas if

we are nice.

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