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caspert79
Joined: 31 Oct 2010 Posts: 3221 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2022 2:09 pm Post subject: Comparison Canon FD 35mm f/2 concave vs Rokkor MD 35mm f/2.8 |
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caspert79 wrote:
Comparison between the Canon FD 35mm f/2 chrome nose (last concave version) versus the Minolta MD 35mm f/2.8.
Center comparison:
centercomparison by devoscasper, on Flickr
Both lenses show excellent center resolution and contrast. Contrast a bit lower from the Canon wide open, but still very good resolution. The yellowing of the thoriated glass is visible.
Corner comparison:
cornercomparison by devoscasper, on Flickr
The Minolta, which has an excellent reputation, is clearly better in resolving the extreme corners up until f/8. At f/8, the difference is negligible. The corners of the Canon improve a bit further at f/11, and become slightly better than the Minolta's.
Then, a bokeh test:
bokehcomparison by devoscasper, on Flickr
Of course subjective, but I like the Canon's bokeh slightly more. Not tested here, but in the department of flare resistance the Minolta is better. _________________ For Sale:
Steinheil Auto D Tele Quinar 135mm f/2.8 (Exa)
ISCO Isconar 100mm f/4 (Exa)
Steinheil Cassarit 50mm f/2.8 M39 (Paxette)
I'm always interested in trading lenses! |
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RokkorDoctor
Joined: 27 Nov 2021 Posts: 1432 Location: Kent, UK
Expire: 2025-05-01
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Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2022 5:01 pm Post subject: |
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RokkorDoctor wrote:
It would be interesting to know if Thorium lenses, once aged, also affects CA (the Canon seems to have more than the Minolta). From memory I have once read that Thorium glass not only colours with age (yellow/amber), but that other optical properties are also affected.
The yellowing can be partially cured by exposure to UV light, but I don't know if that also fixes any other possible age-related optical issues of Thorium glass.
What is sure is that depending on the destination it won't always make it past all customs-checks when shipping internationally, on account of the very detectable radiation (not too harmful in occasional use, but very detectable above background levels when checked for). _________________ Mark
SONY A7S, A7RII + dust-sealed modded Novoflex/Fotodiox/Rayqual MD-NEX adapters
Minolta SR-1, SRT-101/303, XD7/XD11, XGM, X700
Bronica SQAi
Ricoh GX100
Minolta majority of all Rokkor SR/AR/MC/MD models made
Sigma 14mm/3.5 for SR mount
Tamron SP 60B 300mm/2.8 (Adaptall)
Samyang T-S 24mm/3.5 (Nikon mount, DIY converted to SR mount)
Schneider-Kreuznach PC-Super-Angulon 28mm/2.8 (SR mount)
Bronica PS 35/40/50/65/80/110/135/150/180/200/250mm |
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kymarto
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 409 Location: Portland, OR and Milan, Italy
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Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2022 5:32 pm Post subject: |
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kymarto wrote:
RokkorDoctor wrote: |
It would be interesting to know if Thorium lenses, once aged, also affects CA (the Canon seems to have more than the Minolta). From memory I have once read that Thorium glass not only colours with age (yellow/amber), but that other optical properties are also affected.
The yellowing can be partially cured by exposure to UV light, but I don't know if that also fixes any other possible age-related optical issues of Thorium glass.
What is sure is that depending on the destination it won't always make it past all customs-checks when shipping internationally, on account of the very detectable radiation (not too harmful in occasional use, but very detectable above background levels when checked for). |
Apart from browning, I do not believe that there are any other optical effects from radiation in thoriated lenses. If anyone knows otherwise please post a link. _________________ Vintage lens aficionado |
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stevemark
Joined: 29 Apr 2011 Posts: 4080 Location: Switzerland
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Posted: Tue Dec 27, 2022 8:07 pm Post subject: |
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stevemark wrote:
Thanks for that comparison!
It confirms for the concave FD 2/35mm what we have seen before for the convex FD 2/35mm: That the Minolta MD 2.8/35mm (and the MC/MD 1.8/35 as well, BTW) are better suited for landscape purposes than the Canon FD and nFD 2/35mm lenses.
http://www.artaphot.ch/systemuebergreifend/objektive/610-35mm-1-2-1-1-8-1-1-4-lenses
S _________________ www.artaphot.ch |
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caspert79
Joined: 31 Oct 2010 Posts: 3221 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:02 am Post subject: |
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caspert79 wrote:
Yeah, it’s a great lens. And cheap. _________________ For Sale:
Steinheil Auto D Tele Quinar 135mm f/2.8 (Exa)
ISCO Isconar 100mm f/4 (Exa)
Steinheil Cassarit 50mm f/2.8 M39 (Paxette)
I'm always interested in trading lenses! |
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Ernst Dinkla
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 410
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 8:39 am Post subject: |
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Ernst Dinkla wrote:
kymarto wrote: |
RokkorDoctor wrote: |
It would be interesting to know if Thorium lenses, once aged, also affects CA (the Canon seems to have more than the Minolta). From memory I have once read that Thorium glass not only colours with age (yellow/amber), but that other optical properties are also affected.
The yellowing can be partially cured by exposure to UV light, but I don't know if that also fixes any other possible age-related optical issues of Thorium glass.
What is sure is that depending on the destination it won't always make it past all customs-checks when shipping internationally, on account of the very detectable radiation (not too harmful in occasional use, but very detectable above background levels when checked for). |
Apart from browning, I do not believe that there are any other optical effects from radiation in thoriated lenses. If anyone knows otherwise please post a link. |
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/61218888 _________________ Met vriendelijke groet, Ernst
http://www.pigment-print.com/spectralplots/spectrumviz_1.htm
March 2017 update, 750+ inkjet media white spectral plots |
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kymarto
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 409 Location: Portland, OR and Milan, Italy
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 10:17 am Post subject: |
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kymarto wrote:
Ernst Dinkla wrote: |
kymarto wrote: |
RokkorDoctor wrote: |
It would be interesting to know if Thorium lenses, once aged, also affects CA (the Canon seems to have more than the Minolta). From memory I have once read that Thorium glass not only colours with age (yellow/amber), but that other optical properties are also affected.
The yellowing can be partially cured by exposure to UV light, but I don't know if that also fixes any other possible age-related optical issues of Thorium glass.
What is sure is that depending on the destination it won't always make it past all customs-checks when shipping internationally, on account of the very detectable radiation (not too harmful in occasional use, but very detectable above background levels when checked for). |
Apart from browning, I do not believe that there are any other optical effects from radiation in thoriated lenses. If anyone knows otherwise please post a link. |
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/61218888 |
Anything other than a single unattributed comment in a thread. I've studied this quite extensively and never seen a mention of anything remotely similar. Only coloration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-centers _________________ Vintage lens aficionado |
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Ernst Dinkla
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 410
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 4:43 pm Post subject: |
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Ernst Dinkla wrote:
kymarto wrote: |
Ernst Dinkla wrote: |
kymarto wrote: |
RokkorDoctor wrote: |
It would be interesting to know if Thorium lenses, once aged, also affects CA (the Canon seems to have more than the Minolta). From memory I have once read that Thorium glass not only colours with age (yellow/amber), but that other optical properties are also affected.
The yellowing can be partially cured by exposure to UV light, but I don't know if that also fixes any other possible age-related optical issues of Thorium glass.
What is sure is that depending on the destination it won't always make it past all customs-checks when shipping internationally, on account of the very detectable radiation (not too harmful in occasional use, but very detectable above background levels when checked for). |
Apart from browning, I do not believe that there are any other optical effects from radiation in thoriated lenses. If anyone knows otherwise please post a link. |
https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/61218888 |
Anything other than a single unattributed comment in a thread. I've studied this quite extensively and never seen a mention of anything remotely similar. Only coloration
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-centers |
Maybe we should ask him to give some comments on his statements.
I doubt for what the glass is known for; a high refractive index with relative low dispersion, will be kept at the same level with what goes on in that glass over 50 years. Maybe it can hardly be optically tested but I would be surprised if it did not have any effect on resolution / CAs.
Ignoring these aspects there still is the lower light transmission and the heavier blue light blocking which has to be compensated. For me reason enough to give lenses like that a UV light treatment.
One article mentioned a low level of extra sensor noise due to the radioactivity of a lens. Not something to worry about in practice as I understand it. I guess it would have been worse with an unused film in some vintage camera models. _________________ Met vriendelijke groet, Ernst
http://www.pigment-print.com/spectralplots/spectrumviz_1.htm
March 2017 update, 750+ inkjet media white spectral plots |
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kymarto
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 409 Location: Portland, OR and Milan, Italy
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 5:53 pm Post subject: |
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kymarto wrote:
The composition of the glass does not change, nor the curvature, and so neither will the index of refraction nor the dispersion. _________________ Vintage lens aficionado |
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visualopsins
Joined: 05 Mar 2009 Posts: 11058 Location: California
Expire: 2025-04-11
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 6:27 pm Post subject: |
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visualopsins wrote:
Corrected link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-center
Quote: |
An F center or Farbe center (from the original German Farbzentrum, where Farbe means color and zentrum means center) is a type of crystallographic defect in which an anionic vacancy in a crystal lattice is occupied by one or more unpaired electrons. Electrons in such a vacancy in a crystal lattice tend to absorb light in the visible spectrum such that a material that is usually transparent becomes colored. The greater the number of F centers, the more intense the color of the compound. F centers are a type of color center. |
Doesn't sound like the crystal dimension is changed with yellowing; therefore no change in refraction, yes? _________________ ☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮ like attracts like! ☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮☮
Cameras: Sony ILCE-7RM2, Spotmatics II, F, and ESII, Nikon P4
Lenses:
M42 Asahi Optical Co., Takumar 1:4 f=35mm, 1:2 f=58mm (Sonnar), 1:2.4 f=58mm (Heliar), 1:2.2 f=55mm (Gaussian), 1:2.8 f=105mm (Model I), 1:2.8/105 (Model II), 1:5.6/200, Tele-Takumar 1:5.6/200, 1:6.3/300, Macro-Takumar 1:4/50, Auto-Takumar 1:2.3 f=35, 1:1.8 f=55mm, 1:2.2 f=55mm, Super-TAKUMAR 1:3.5/28 (fat), 1:2/35 (Fat), 1:1.4/50 (8-element), Super-Multi-Coated Fisheye-TAKUMAR 1:4/17, Super-Multi-Coated TAKUMAR 1:4.5/20, 1:3.5/24, 1:3.5/28, 1:2/35, 1:3.5/35, 1:1.8/85, 1:1.9/85 1:2.8/105, 1:3.5/135, 1:2.5/135 (II), 1:4/150, 1:4/200, 1:4/300, 1:4.5/500, Super-Multi-Coated Macro-TAKUMAR 1:4/50, 1:4/100, Super-Multi-Coated Bellows-TAKUMAR 1:4/100, SMC TAKUMAR 1:1.4/50, 1:1.8/55
M42 Carl Zeiss Jena Flektogon 2.4/35
Contax Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 28-70mm F3.5-4.5
Pentax K-mount SMC PENTAX-A ZOOM 1:3.5 35~105mm, SMC PENTAX ZOOM 1:4 45~125mm
Nikon Micro-NIKKOR-P-C Auto 1:3.5 f=55mm, NIKKOR-P Auto 105mm f/2.5 Pre-AI (Sonnar), Micro-NIKKOR 105mm 1:4 AI, NIKKOR AI-S 35-135mm f/3,5-4,5
Tamron SP 17mm f/3.5 (51B), Tamron SP 17mm f/3.5 (151B), SP 500mm f/8 (55BB), SP 70-210mm f/3.5 (19AH)
Vivitar 100mm 1:2.8 MC 1:1 Macro Telephoto (Kiron)
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calvin83
Joined: 12 Apr 2009 Posts: 7584 Location: Hong Kong
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:11 pm Post subject: |
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calvin83 wrote:
I consider the coloration as a build-in yellow/orange filter. _________________ The best lens is the one you have with you.
https://lensfever.com/
https://www.instagram.com/_lens_fever/ |
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kymarto
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 409 Location: Portland, OR and Milan, Italy
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Posted: Wed Dec 28, 2022 10:10 pm Post subject: |
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kymarto wrote:
visualopsins wrote: |
Corrected link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-center
Quote: |
An F center or Farbe center (from the original German Farbzentrum, where Farbe means color and zentrum means center) is a type of crystallographic defect in which an anionic vacancy in a crystal lattice is occupied by one or more unpaired electrons. Electrons in such a vacancy in a crystal lattice tend to absorb light in the visible spectrum such that a material that is usually transparent becomes colored. The greater the number of F centers, the more intense the color of the compound. F centers are a type of color center. |
Doesn't sound like the crystal dimension is changed with yellowing; therefore no change in refraction, yes? |
Exactly _________________ Vintage lens aficionado |
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RokkorDoctor
Joined: 27 Nov 2021 Posts: 1432 Location: Kent, UK
Expire: 2025-05-01
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Posted: Thu Dec 29, 2022 10:33 am Post subject: |
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RokkorDoctor wrote:
kymarto wrote: |
visualopsins wrote: |
Corrected link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-center
Quote: |
An F center or Farbe center (from the original German Farbzentrum, where Farbe means color and zentrum means center) is a type of crystallographic defect in which an anionic vacancy in a crystal lattice is occupied by one or more unpaired electrons. Electrons in such a vacancy in a crystal lattice tend to absorb light in the visible spectrum such that a material that is usually transparent becomes colored. The greater the number of F centers, the more intense the color of the compound. F centers are a type of color center. |
Doesn't sound like the crystal dimension is changed with yellowing; therefore no change in refraction, yes? |
Exactly |
Surely it is inevitable that over time the optical properties will change?
What starts off as thorium, eventually will end up as lead due to the radioactive decay. Glass with ~30% thorium will surely have different optical properties than glass with ~30% lead? During this decay more and more thorium will change into a host of other daughter elements.
Near "full" decay will take hundreds of billions of years if not longer in the case of thorium, but since the decay clearly already introduces colour centres in our lifetime (yellowing), is it not inconceivable that the slow but gradual build-up of other daughter elements are slowly going to change the glass structure? (this is a genuine question; I'm not an optical materials expert) _________________ Mark
SONY A7S, A7RII + dust-sealed modded Novoflex/Fotodiox/Rayqual MD-NEX adapters
Minolta SR-1, SRT-101/303, XD7/XD11, XGM, X700
Bronica SQAi
Ricoh GX100
Minolta majority of all Rokkor SR/AR/MC/MD models made
Sigma 14mm/3.5 for SR mount
Tamron SP 60B 300mm/2.8 (Adaptall)
Samyang T-S 24mm/3.5 (Nikon mount, DIY converted to SR mount)
Schneider-Kreuznach PC-Super-Angulon 28mm/2.8 (SR mount)
Bronica PS 35/40/50/65/80/110/135/150/180/200/250mm |
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kymarto
Joined: 30 Nov 2016 Posts: 409 Location: Portland, OR and Milan, Italy
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Posted: Thu Dec 29, 2022 10:52 am Post subject: |
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kymarto wrote:
There might be imperceptible changes, but so small as to be completely insignificant. Th-232 has a half life of 14 billion years. These lenses are 50 years old, so 0.000000018% has decayed so far. I can guarantee that that is not what is causing the exhibited chromatic aberration. _________________ Vintage lens aficionado |
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caspert79
Joined: 31 Oct 2010 Posts: 3221 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Thu Dec 29, 2022 11:08 am Post subject: |
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caspert79 wrote:
CA is still pretty well controlled by the Canon considering its age, note that this is a 100% crop on a 42+ mp sensor. And the Minolta is a more modern lens. _________________ For Sale:
Steinheil Auto D Tele Quinar 135mm f/2.8 (Exa)
ISCO Isconar 100mm f/4 (Exa)
Steinheil Cassarit 50mm f/2.8 M39 (Paxette)
I'm always interested in trading lenses! |
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lumens pixel
Joined: 27 Feb 2019 Posts: 887
Expire: 2021-06-25
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Posted: Thu Dec 29, 2022 3:41 pm Post subject: |
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lumens pixel wrote:
Nice test and I am not surprised by the result.
A quick and dirty comparison of a nFD 35 2,8 and of the concave Canon did not evidence a significant difference at shared apertures.
The Minolta 5/5 35 2,8 is outstanding and the test renders justice to this lens.
I have not tested the MC HH 35 1,8 but the more recent MD 1,8 is certainly inferior to the modern 2,8.
So unless you are stucked needing f 2,0 I see no need to pay for the big glass. _________________ Lumens Pixel
-------------
Minolta SR mount: 16 2,8; Sigma SuperWide 24 2,8; 28 2,5; 28 2,8; 28 3,5; 35 2,8; 45 2,0; 50 1,4; 50 1,7; 50 2,0; 58 1,4; 85 2,0; 100 2,5; 100 4 Macro; 135 3,5; 135 2,8; 200 4; RF 250 5,6; 24-35 3,5; 35-70 3,5; 75-150 4; 70-210 4
Canon FD mount: Tokina RMC 17 3,5; 28 2,8; 35 2,8; 50 1,8; 50 3,5 Macro; 55 1,2; 135 3,5; 135 2,5; 200 4,0; 300 5,6; 28-55 3,5 4,5; Tokina SZ-X SD 270; 70-150 4,5; 70-210 f4; 80-200 4L; Tokina SZ-X 845
Tamron Adaptall: 28-80 3,5-4,2 (27A); 70-210 3,8-4 (46A); 60-300 (23A); 90 2,5 (52B); 35-135 3,5-4,5 (40A)
Tamron SP: 20-40 2,7-3,5 (266D) |
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caspert79
Joined: 31 Oct 2010 Posts: 3221 Location: The Netherlands
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Posted: Thu Dec 29, 2022 3:48 pm Post subject: |
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caspert79 wrote:
lumens pixel wrote: |
Nice test and I am not surprised by the result.
A quick and dirty comparison of a nFD 35 2,8 and of the concave Canon did not evidence a significant difference at shared apertures.
The Minolta 5/5 35 2,8 is outstanding and the test renders justice to this lens.
I have not tested the MC HH 35 1,8 but the more recent MD 1,8 is certainly inferior to the modern 2,8.
So unless you are stucked needing f 2,0 I see no need to pay for the big glass. |
True. I have tested the MC HH 35/1.8. It’s a nice lens with classic rendering. It’s not on par with the MD 35/2.8 though. _________________ For Sale:
Steinheil Auto D Tele Quinar 135mm f/2.8 (Exa)
ISCO Isconar 100mm f/4 (Exa)
Steinheil Cassarit 50mm f/2.8 M39 (Paxette)
I'm always interested in trading lenses! |
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