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any experience with the 75mm color heliar, (Voigtlander)


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I can't get on too well with my (optically great) 90mm lens for my M6. It just doesn't balance well for vertical shots which is the best way to shoot portraits. I'm looking at the new 75mm Color Heliar lens from Voigtlander. It is smaller and lighter than the 90mm and looks attractive as substitute. Any hands on experience out there? Before a group of folks send in the sugestion, I've already read Erwin Puts' article. It confusses me even more... there are several conflicting attributes. It is both possessing "...high contrast image with outstanding rendition of fine detail..." Yet "...corners are very soft with low contrast..." Both of these statments are for the wide open performance of the lens. I know I can't expect Summilux performance for less than 500 dollars, but is this lens usable? I also thought about trying to find the last vintage Tele-elmarit which may be physically small enough... but I've read many LUG comments about etching or fogging due to animal oils used in the lubricant. Any truth to this??? Any experience with the TELE- Elmarit? Thank for any help. Al
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Is your 90mm the Summicron or the Elmarit-M?

 

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Big difference in handling IMHO. The Elmarit-M/2.8 (current

generation) is an overlooked beauty.

 

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The older Tele-Elmarit, and especially the collapsing f/4 Tele

Elmarits are perhaps smaller, though not as high performance.

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Al

 

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I assume Erwin Puts means that the performance is good in the center,

but not at the corners - perhaps not unexpected as he talks about it

at full aperture. No experience of the lens though.

 

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I have no experience of the Tele-Elmarit, but it has always had a

very good reputation, performance wise, although the latest Elmarit

is marginally better. Certainly the TE is wonderfully small and might

well go better with the camera. I wanted one to go with my CL, but

was given such a deal for a current Elmarit that I could not afford

to miss it. Also, I found that many on the secondhand market seemed

to very well used indeed (scratched elements, battered and generally

in poor shape), although this may just be New York. When they are in

good condition they seem to go for almost the price of the current

version.

 

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The good thing about the Voigtlanders is that they are not so much of

an outlay if you decide that they are not quite to your taste.

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My current 90mm is the latest Elmarit. I believe that it is a great

lens... almost too sharp for portraits. It just causes me too many

problems when I shoot vertical. With the eye piece down, the

supporting hand obstructs the finder. When I flip the camera over

180 degress, eye piece up, the rangefinder window is covered.

Unlike the 35 and 50mm "crons, the weight is far enough away from

the camera body to affect balance, and thus sharpness. That is why I

believe a smaller lens would handle better, and any reduced optical

potential would be made up for in the handling.

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Al,

 

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I tend to agree with you. I have not handled the new 75mm Heliar, but

I use the same 90mm Elmarit-M. I find its handling and balance a bit

unwieldy, particularly when compared to the 50 or 35 Summicrons. For

me, the problem arises when focussing; I keep feeling for and miss the

focus tab found on the other two lenses.

 

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I tried a Tele-Elmarit and found it handled and balanced much better.

But I hesitate to give up the quality of the Elmarit-M.

 

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Sergio.

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Some digression:

 

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I found the head shot in 35 mm portrait mode is a little too tight

(narrow)to my taste. I often like 35 portraits in landscale mode.

The movies (cinema photo)are always in landscape mode and

sometimes produce very nice head shots.

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  • 3 weeks later...

The tele elmarit is prone to wierd problems in the inner elements.

Both mine and a friends both went bad on us. I love the current 90mm

f2.8 lens, but I just wish the focusing wasn't quite as tight. I

tried the 90mm Rokkor from the CLE, which is tiny and smooth, but it

didn't have the quality that the Elmarit has,(or the 40mm Rokkor for

that matter). For now, Im just living with the stiff focusing

because the images the Elmarit is capable of are outstanding.

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  • 3 months later...

Just a follow up question on this.

 

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How does one use a LTM lens on an M series body?

 

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Do you have to scale focus, or does the focusing cam get engaged in

some fashion?

 

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The 75 does look like a nice size/length for some casual portraiture.

I've used the 75 Summilux and loved it for the length and framing,

but hated its size and heft.

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Mani,

 

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If you mean original screw mount Leica lenses (Leica Thread Mount)I

use a few ones(21,28,35,50, and 90mm -a little bit) on M3, M4P,

IIIFRD, Canon 7S. LTM-lens cams are working fine as well as M-lens

cams. If you mean non-leica screw mount lenses made for RF-cameras

(Leica-type\copy), for example Canon 7S, I don't see any problem, so

as such kind of lenses are produced with cams and are working on M-

cameras exactly as M-lenses. I have own and use cheaper and very

light non-Leica LTM-lenses: 20/5.6 Russar, 35mm F1.8 Canon lens,

35/2.8 Zeiss Biogon, 50/2.0 and 85/2.0 Zeiss Sonnars on Canon 7S,

M4P, IIIF RD. Concerning a cam there is no any mechanical difference

between M-lenses and LTM-lenses with M-adaptors. I haven't ever seen

any LTM-lens whithout a cam, exept a cheaper 20/5.6 Russar with the

exeptional DOF.

 

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Regards,

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There are lens adapters that allow you to mount the screw mount

lenses to the M Leica.... basically a simple ring with an M mount and

a opening with the screw threads for the lens. The thickness of the

ring is equal to the variation between the LTM and M cameras, so

infinity focus is no problem. The focusing cam on the lens works

with the camera, so you retain normal focusing operation.

 

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Additionally, the proper ring brings up the correct frame line in the

camera, so you would need the correct one. They are long out of

production by Leica, but are now being manufactured again by 3rd

party companies. At Tamarkin in the US, they are just under 60

Dollars. You can see a good picture on Gandy's site in the Leica

section.

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  • 5 months later...

I just got this lens in the black version. I have yet to use it

extensively in the field, but the first thing that stands out,

(contrary to various comments in the net stating that its dimensions

are similar to the Elmarit M), is that it is a very small lens. If

you remove the screw on lens hood with its nicely fitting cap, the

front element diameter and length/diameter of body are extremely

close to the 50 Summicron.

 

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The focusing ring though is much stiffer-a little less than the

Elmarit but basically in the same league. The grip is better though.

 

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More comments upon use...

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