Dienstag, 20. Januar 2015

The Minolta MC Rokkor PF 55mm f/1.7 - a optical dream?

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at open aperture
Feels like: the three hundredth Review this lens. 
Yes, I know all photographers all they had ever been in his hand. Then they have the lens eventually sold, given away or lost. Such is life ;o)
Nevertheless, it is worthwhile to take a closer look of this piece.
The Minolta MC Rokkor PF 55mm f/1.7 was a standard prime lens with manual focus (originally intended for the Minolta SLRs- logical when you think about the age of the lens) nowadays suitable for Full Frame and APS-C sensors, manufactured from 1966 to 1972. A lens for Minolta SR (MC,MD) mount. The current average price on EBay or in various forums is about 20 to 40 Euros. OK, more you really do not pay for it.

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/2.8
As usual in front a little bit of statistics:
The prime lens with a 55mm focal length has a weight from 230 gr. (7,8 oz) and the dimensions of 37 x 61 mm. The  aperture had six blades and can be closed from f/1.7 to f/16.  The minimum focus distance is 55 mm (1,75 ft.). The filter thread is 52 mm.

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/5.6
Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/5.6

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/5.6
The lens is all metal and very solid, have a nice feel to it.
The aperture ring is very precise and clearly audible. The photographer can adjust the aperture with a little practice without eye contact. The adjustment distance for sharpness is a little short.  But with the help of the focus peaking, it is straightforward to find at a Sony NEX or the Sony a7 the correct focus point.  I have used a simple and cheap adapter NEX - MC/MD from China, like this one from amazon. The adapter sat perfect and plan between camera and lens. The delivery does take a little longer because the goods come from Hong Kong or directly from China, but you save a lot of money.




Let us now consider the image quality.
Wide open we find good sharpness and little corner softness. The colors are a bit washed out. At f 2.8 on the image is sharp from one corner to the other and shows excellent contrast and colors.
The optical resolution is outstanding. In the magnification to 100% every detail is very good to see. But: the lens is quite sensitive to the back light. The contrast is gone, it flares arise light. Photos are relatively unattractive. Closing the aperture brings no improvement. Here's a particularly two bad examples of the effect of backlighting:

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/2.8
Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/5.6
Remedy a lens hood for the 52mm filter thread. The lens itself has no special bayonet for a sun visor. 
You can safely buy a cheap replica from China as this one on amazon.  Who is on branded goods, should buy the original Leica, but costs about 50 euros. 
The Minolta Rokkor is even suitable as a portrait lens. On an APS-C sensor, such as the Sony NEX-3N equivalent focal length 75 mm. But even at the full format as on the Sony a7 you can easily customize portraits. Look here:

Sony a7 with Minolta PF-Rokkor 55mm f/1.7 at f/4.0
To sum times together: the lens is very high quality; it makes from Aperture 2 to 2.8 very sharp, crisp images, and you'll get it relatively cheap to buy. What more do you want? Do you need more light intensity, then look to lenses with an aperture from 1.2 or 1.4, otherwise you can buy this lens without hesitation. With this lens you can easily shoot photos with available light. No problem.
I wish all my readers: Always good light!


Sonntag, 4. Januar 2015

Auto Revuenon MC 50mm f/1.4 - a great walk-around lens


Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at f/2.8 (the "Feengrotten" in my hometown Saalfeld)
The fast Revuenon MC 50 1: 1.4 was introduced in 1980 as a kit lens of the sensationally good Revueflex AC2. "Revue" was the trademark of the company "Quelle" from Nürnberg, go bust in 2009. 
It is often told in the Internet that revue produced exclusively in the former GDR.
The here discussed "Auto-Revuenon 1.4 / 50 MC" comes not from GDR production, but from the production halls of Chinon or Cosina (were both, Cosina was rather too M42 times of suppliers, Chinon rather to bayonet era).

By far the largest part of the range of the former "Foto-Quelle" is built by Cosina and later at Chinon and come with Revue label to Germany. Meanwhile, the lenses of the brand "Revue" spread worldwide. There are many cruel bad lenses, but also some real highlights. This lens is one of the really good specimens of Revuenon.  There are at flickr, but not only there countless examples of the fantastic quality of this lens even at full aperture.

First, the usual statistics:
The manual focusing lens has a minimum focal distance of 45 centimeters. The lens mount of my copy is a Pentax K bayonet. The filter diameter is 49 millimeters. In the lens housing, there are six elements in five groups. The lens has six aperture blades. The lens is made of metal and weighs approximately 250 grams. The setting is very high-quality and convey a good haptics , the lenses are multicoated. The bokeh is very nice, look here:

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at full aperture
A few years ago you got this lens when purchasing a camera "Revueflex" as it were bestowed with it. But times are changing.  The prices for the really good manual lenses have so tightened that you pay today up to ten times what had been common even five years ago. Today you pay sometimes  up to a hundred Euros for the Revuenon 50mm f / 1.4.   I got it for about 50 euros from a colleague from the german DSLR- forum.  The lens is perfect as a portrait lens on an APS-C camera. Converted to full frame is the focal length of about 75 to 80 millimeters.




But also on full frame cameras like the Sony a7 this lens is very good for portraits. Here are examples at open aperture and aperture 4.0. Many thanks to my good friend Hartmut Wohlfarth.

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at full aperture

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at f/4.0
What can be said about the picture quality? Well, the optical resolution is even at maximum aperture at a very high level. Even the smallest details can be seen very well in a 100-fold magnification.
I have uploaded the images in full resolution, especially for this post.
At full aperture the pictures looks little bit washed-out. But stopping down the pictures are awesome and fantastic in every sense. You'll love the glass.
At the full-frame camera lens vignetting clearly visible. If you stop down two or three times, but this effect disappears completely.

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at full aperture
The Bokeh is very pleasing and acceptable although the lens has a total of only six aperture blades.

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon 50mm f/1.4 at full aperture
By direct or indirect backlight, the lens behaves relatively unspectacular. It caused some ghosting and smearing a little, but nothing really bad. You can use these photos without hesitation. For indirect backlit by the sun but a lens hood could be beneficial. But I can not look up what lens hood really fits. Because of their relatively low weight and the acceptable size of the lens can actually use as Always-top lens on a full frame camera.
The sharpness is already at full aperture absolutely fine, but at f 2.8 to f 4 it achieves excellent image quality from edge to edge.   The glass is really a stunner, you do not want to part with it more.
If it had an auto focus, it would be a real bestseller. But then it would certainly be outrageously expensive.
To summarize: If you can get it for little money, then buy it necessarily. I have no regrets and I will certainly use a good long while.
Finally, a few photos with the Auto Revuenon 50mm f / 1.4:

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/1.4
Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/1.4
Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/4.0

Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/5.6
Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/2.8
Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/1.4
Sony a7 with Auto Revuenon at f/2.0

Samstag, 20. Dezember 2014

Olympus OM Zuiko Auto-S 50mm f/1.8 - a good choice

Sony a7 with OM 50mm f/1.8 at full aperture
Let's start our mini challenge of the cheap 50mm lenses. I begin with a really good glass. The Zuiko Auto-S 50mm f/1.8 was in the past one of the most sold lenses of OM-system. Today, we would call this lens a typical kit lens. You can still buy it for very little money. Normally it should not cost more than 30 Euros, although prices have risen sharply in recent times. This lens is a secret hint, it is not only cheap, it is lightweight and small too.
We come to the statistical disclosures: the little lens has a length of 32 millimeters and a weight of 165 grams. The maximum diameter of the lens is 61 mm, the thread of the filter 49 millimeters. The design includes six lenses in five groups. The aperture can be divided into stages close of 1.8 to 16. The shortest focus distance is 45 centimeters.  Here you can see the lens on a full frame camera Sony a7.  If think away the adapter, then the Zuiko 50mm is really compact.





I have the lens tested on a Sony NEX-3N and at a Sony a7 with full format. Oh well, I have now collected a whole bunch of different 50mm lenses. And now I can compete against each other.  Who is all in the race? Right now lie before me: besides the OM Zuiko 50mm f/1.8, the Zeiss Jena 50mm f/2.8 (named "Eagle Eye"), the Asahi Pentax SMC Takumar 55mm f/1.8 and the Minolta MC Rokkor PF 55mm f/1.7. At this point I would like to thank my good friends from all over the world who have made it possible to compare these lenses. They have sent me their 50mm lenses, so I test them. Thank you for your trust.

Sony a7 with OM 50mm f/1.8 at full aperture
Getting back to our test candidate. The feel of the lens is excellent. Everything is solid, the mechanism works great. The apertures will snap rich and clearly audible. The aperture can be operated very well even without eye contact. The focus ring runs smooth and has a sufficiently long adjustment path. Ideally suited to adapt to any camera, like Micro four-third or Sony Nex with focus-peaking.  My OM-NEX adapter I purchased at amazon. It is a simple copy from China, which has cost not more than ten Euros.

Sony a7 with OM 50mm f/1.8 at full aperture
Sony a7 with OM 50mm at f/2.8
Sony a7 with OM 50mm f/1.8 at f/4.0
Sony a7 with OM 50mm f/1.8 at f/2.8
How it looks with the picture quality?
At full aperture the images are a little dull and lacks contrast. The center of the picture is sufficiently sharp even at full aperture. But at the full frame camera, the edges are very weak. But stop down from 2.8 to 4.0 the photos are sharp from one corner to the other.
The Zuiko 50mm f / 1.8 is a little sensitive backlit subjects. There is a little purple fringing and ghosting. The whole thing disappears immediately when you stop down the lens. Additionally, you can buy a lens hood made of metal or rubber, which can be screwed into the filter thread.
If you shoot in RAW format, you can quiet conscience work with open aperture. The small weaken of the lens can quickly improve in Adobe Lightroom. Used at full aperture shows the OM Zuiko 50mm f / 1.8 results comparable to the legendary lenses from Zeiss at the Leica- M. OK, that sounds very enthusiastic, but look at my photos. Sometimes you can guess the 3D effect.
Unfortunately, this lens is only a slight telephoto lens on an APS-C sensor. But to fully recommend it as a portrait lens.
Let us summarize: I can fully recommend this lens. The price-performance ratio is perfect. As far as optical and mechanical power for so little money there is nowhere.  My recommendation: If you can get it cheap, then buy it.

Samstag, 22. November 2014

The 50mm challenge - it is worth a try


Hi guys, i will start in next few days a challenge of the really old and cheap 50mm lenses. Do you lie in your showcase even such old baby around? Then send the items to me so I can try them. The more the merrier.  For starters, all of Minolta MD, Canon FD, M39 or Nikon Ai (S) would be a great thing. I know there are also a lot of M42, but the right adapter I have not yet here. I'll try the lenses on APS-C and full frame test on. I just need cheap Sony a7; o)








Montag, 17. November 2014

misty morning



In November, the early hours are usually foggy, cold and uncomfortable. It's the same this year. Every morning I run my usual route to work and sometimes I take my camera out of my pocket. Today I will show three photos that are incurred in the morning twilight between night and day.   
As usual with me everything in black and white. Looks a little bit like Bruce Barnbaum, is not it?



Sonntag, 2. November 2014

art and communications- a short visit in Nürnberg


To knowing about Nürnberg in two days was my destination for a little trip. It was damn a very short time to see all of the highlights of these nice town in franconia. I had no great pleasure to haul a lot of cameras and lenses.  So I grabbed my little Olympus E-M5 and had a good time. Only the 25mm f/1.8 and a 17mm f/2.8 pancake and it was good.  The main thing I shoot for myself black-and-white images. Look the pictures and enjoy it- my special kind of photography: