yessammassey
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- Dec 19, 2015
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TL; DR? Skip six paragraphs (including the list) to get to the meat of the issue. I have a terrible record of buying 'bad' wide angle lenses. It kicked off with Nikon SLRs. I went through 5 used manual focus Nikkors between 24 & 28mm before just kind of giving up. They all had either weird centering flaws or severe incongruities in performance between distant and close focus. Sometimes 1 or 2 out of 4 corners would never sharpen up when stopped down, or there would just be a 'smearing' of detail from edge to corner when focused past 5m or so. My last try with Nikon was with a 24mm 2.8 non-Ai purchased from a local camera store. It was sharper wide open in two of the corners than it was in the center!
So what was I to make of my experience with these lenses being so different from all of the positive reports I was seeing online? After 5 lenses, 3 bodies, all sorts of film stocks and scanning methods, all producing the same results with these lenses, I could only conclude that most of the used lenses being sold on the market these days must be worn out from decades of use. They've been knocked around and their helicoids actuated tens of thousands of times. As a result, the optical elements lose their factory alignment. The copies that people are reviewing online were better cared-for, and/or their quality was at the high end of the sample variation curve. I guess I shouldn't been surprised that the older lenses that people are actually selling at this point (in stores or on the auction site) are the duds that they don't want to keep for themselves. Otherwise they hold onto them for the most part. The Sekor-C 90mm that came with the RB67 I bought from the estate of a deceased photographer is truly perfect. And of course he held onto it until the end.
But it took me a while to realize that I wasn't going to be getting much good stuff buying from resellers. Here's the whole sorry story told by a list of lenses that were purchased from the auction site - Camera Hell. These all came after I gave up on the Nikkors.
I've heard whispers of a thing called 'film flatness'. It seems to be a subject of some contention. Some maintain that it's an overblown issue. Either way, it's something that seems to be much more of a concern with 120 film than 135.
Meat:
I wonder, would film flatness issues cause the kind of linear, across-the-frame gradation of sharpness that you see (very faintly) in a photo like this? It's the left and right edges of a scan from the 100mm 3.5 Fuji lens. It's so hard to display with a scan on the web, and the 'sharpening' caused by jpeg downsampling destroys any sense of the difference in sharpness between the left edge and the middle (therefore I've cut it out) but try to notice the difference in sharpness between the tree on the left and the tree on the right, or the difference between the highlights on the left and the one lit window in the building on the right, or the difference between the two bottom corners. This was taken with a Fujinon SW 100mm 3.5 at f/16 w/ a cable release on a heavy Silk tripod and pan head. Fuji GL690. (click to view full size)
I'm relating all of this because I just acquired a Bronica GS-1 with 50mm 4.5 lens. I bought the kit from a reseller (shame on me at this point), but it seems like it was someone's working rig before it was sold. Like the RB67 I bought locally, it came with a body, lens, and a bunch of accessories, but not all the accessories one would expect. As if someone found it all together in a box and just took it to the camera seller. So the prospects that it would be decent seemed high enough for me to give it a shot.
With just about every used lens that I've returned, there was some kind of mark or scratch. Sometimes fairly obvious, and sometimes very minuscule, but I could always kind of piece together in my head why the lens might have issues, based on the external signs of damage. (Not that external signs of damage would necessarily always indicate optical issues... I have some beat-up-looking lenses that work great.) With the 50mm on the GS-1, it looks about a flawless as I have ever seen a lens of its age. Even better than the 90mm on the RB67. So I had a good feeling about the test roll I shot and developed yesterday.
But the results, while not conclusive, gave me pause. Please, have a closer look. This was taken at f/5.6, handheld.
(click to view full size)
I'm not worried about the soft corners. That comes with wide-angle MF SLR lenses of this age, especially when not even clicked down a full stop. What concerns me is the difference in detail reproduction between the areas on the left and right side (A & B). Kind of reminiscent of the Fuji 100mm, eh? Only it's the left side that's worse in this case. Just barely, though. Both sides are pretty soft, which indicates to me that (hopefully) both sides will sharpen up in a fairly symmetrical way as the lens is stopped down. Still though, I don't think you could say that both sides are equally unsharp.
I had a message exchange with a tech who had worked on a few of the Fuji interchangeable-lens RFs, and he took some pains to assure me that the old Fuji MF RF lenses were so solid, simple, and heavily-built that it would be very difficult to cause one to become decentered without the application of extreme force. So I'm left to wonder if the side-to-side differences are perhaps not related to the configuration of glass elements at all. Maybe the issue is happening at the film plane. Maybe the film isn't as flat on one side as it is on the other.
Here's something I noticed about the negatives from the Bronica test roll.
See how the top and bottom edges of the exposed area are bowed outward? The bowing isn't symmetrical. neither edge forms a parabola. This is from a strip of Delta 100 sandwiched between two pieces of ANR glass, resting on a perfectly flat light pad, checked with a two-axis spirit level. Scans from a flatbed show the same thing.
Is it more likely that my film loading technique is to blame, rather than any kind of optical defects, when it comes to the issues shown in the above scans? Or maybe there are issues with the film pressure plate? I'm looking for any reason to not just return this lens & camera. I think someday I might rack up too many returns, and people will just stop selling to me. But especially since I've seen what 'good', 'correctly aligned' lenses can do, I'm just not satisfied with these sorts of results.
PS: Hate scanning? Don't believe it's a legitimate way of determining anything about your gear? I'll be glad to mail you a negative. I'm serious! And if you paypal me $100 (my time is valuable... although you might not believe that to be the case based on this novel of a post I just wrote), I'll send you a print! I'm serious!
So what was I to make of my experience with these lenses being so different from all of the positive reports I was seeing online? After 5 lenses, 3 bodies, all sorts of film stocks and scanning methods, all producing the same results with these lenses, I could only conclude that most of the used lenses being sold on the market these days must be worn out from decades of use. They've been knocked around and their helicoids actuated tens of thousands of times. As a result, the optical elements lose their factory alignment. The copies that people are reviewing online were better cared-for, and/or their quality was at the high end of the sample variation curve. I guess I shouldn't been surprised that the older lenses that people are actually selling at this point (in stores or on the auction site) are the duds that they don't want to keep for themselves. Otherwise they hold onto them for the most part. The Sekor-C 90mm that came with the RB67 I bought from the estate of a deceased photographer is truly perfect. And of course he held onto it until the end.
But it took me a while to realize that I wasn't going to be getting much good stuff buying from resellers. Here's the whole sorry story told by a list of lenses that were purchased from the auction site - Camera Hell. These all came after I gave up on the Nikkors.
- 28mm 2.8 Minolta late MD (from a charity thrift store's auction site account) - super dusty but optically centered, Kept.
- 24mm 2.8 Rokkor - decentered, Returned
- 24mm 28 Rokkor - decentered, Returned
- 24mm 2.8 Rokkor - apparently 'repaired' at some point. No infinity. Returned, fixed, sent back to me. Decentered, Kept (I couldn't bring myself to ask for a refund after the guy went through all the trouble of fixing infinity focus)
- 65mm 4 Mamiya-Sekor K/L - decentered floating element. Used for tripod landscapes at f/22 & hyperfocal distance for ages so I didn't realize until long after the return window had closed, but unusable at f/8 & wider, especially focused close. Now going back I can see the unsharp 1/3rd of the frame on all the f/22 landscape slides. Kept, only because I can't conscientiously sell it.
- 80mm 2.8 Arsat-C - perfect, Kept
- 180mm 2.8 Carl Zeiss Jena - perfect, Kept
- 55-90mm 4.5-6.7 for Fuji GA645Zi - weird soft spot along left side, Returned.
- 65mm 8 Fujinon SW for Fuji RF - decentered, Returned
- 65mm 8 Fujinon SW for Fuji RF - left side unsharp, middle moderately sharp, right side sharp out to the edge. WTF? Returned.
- 100mm 3.5 Fujinon S for Fuji RF - left side sharp out to the edge, middle sharp, extreme right side unsharp. WTF? Kept (wasn't as bad as 65mm)
I've heard whispers of a thing called 'film flatness'. It seems to be a subject of some contention. Some maintain that it's an overblown issue. Either way, it's something that seems to be much more of a concern with 120 film than 135.
Meat:
I wonder, would film flatness issues cause the kind of linear, across-the-frame gradation of sharpness that you see (very faintly) in a photo like this? It's the left and right edges of a scan from the 100mm 3.5 Fuji lens. It's so hard to display with a scan on the web, and the 'sharpening' caused by jpeg downsampling destroys any sense of the difference in sharpness between the left edge and the middle (therefore I've cut it out) but try to notice the difference in sharpness between the tree on the left and the tree on the right, or the difference between the highlights on the left and the one lit window in the building on the right, or the difference between the two bottom corners. This was taken with a Fujinon SW 100mm 3.5 at f/16 w/ a cable release on a heavy Silk tripod and pan head. Fuji GL690. (click to view full size)

I'm relating all of this because I just acquired a Bronica GS-1 with 50mm 4.5 lens. I bought the kit from a reseller (shame on me at this point), but it seems like it was someone's working rig before it was sold. Like the RB67 I bought locally, it came with a body, lens, and a bunch of accessories, but not all the accessories one would expect. As if someone found it all together in a box and just took it to the camera seller. So the prospects that it would be decent seemed high enough for me to give it a shot.
With just about every used lens that I've returned, there was some kind of mark or scratch. Sometimes fairly obvious, and sometimes very minuscule, but I could always kind of piece together in my head why the lens might have issues, based on the external signs of damage. (Not that external signs of damage would necessarily always indicate optical issues... I have some beat-up-looking lenses that work great.) With the 50mm on the GS-1, it looks about a flawless as I have ever seen a lens of its age. Even better than the 90mm on the RB67. So I had a good feeling about the test roll I shot and developed yesterday.
But the results, while not conclusive, gave me pause. Please, have a closer look. This was taken at f/5.6, handheld.

(click to view full size)

I'm not worried about the soft corners. That comes with wide-angle MF SLR lenses of this age, especially when not even clicked down a full stop. What concerns me is the difference in detail reproduction between the areas on the left and right side (A & B). Kind of reminiscent of the Fuji 100mm, eh? Only it's the left side that's worse in this case. Just barely, though. Both sides are pretty soft, which indicates to me that (hopefully) both sides will sharpen up in a fairly symmetrical way as the lens is stopped down. Still though, I don't think you could say that both sides are equally unsharp.
I had a message exchange with a tech who had worked on a few of the Fuji interchangeable-lens RFs, and he took some pains to assure me that the old Fuji MF RF lenses were so solid, simple, and heavily-built that it would be very difficult to cause one to become decentered without the application of extreme force. So I'm left to wonder if the side-to-side differences are perhaps not related to the configuration of glass elements at all. Maybe the issue is happening at the film plane. Maybe the film isn't as flat on one side as it is on the other.
Here's something I noticed about the negatives from the Bronica test roll.

See how the top and bottom edges of the exposed area are bowed outward? The bowing isn't symmetrical. neither edge forms a parabola. This is from a strip of Delta 100 sandwiched between two pieces of ANR glass, resting on a perfectly flat light pad, checked with a two-axis spirit level. Scans from a flatbed show the same thing.
Is it more likely that my film loading technique is to blame, rather than any kind of optical defects, when it comes to the issues shown in the above scans? Or maybe there are issues with the film pressure plate? I'm looking for any reason to not just return this lens & camera. I think someday I might rack up too many returns, and people will just stop selling to me. But especially since I've seen what 'good', 'correctly aligned' lenses can do, I'm just not satisfied with these sorts of results.
PS: Hate scanning? Don't believe it's a legitimate way of determining anything about your gear? I'll be glad to mail you a negative. I'm serious! And if you paypal me $100 (my time is valuable... although you might not believe that to be the case based on this novel of a post I just wrote), I'll send you a print! I'm serious!
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