Ray Morgenweck
Member
A user Leica III body can be had for $150 or so. Incredibly cheap for what you get. Screw on the Elmar and it’s home where it belongs.
You know... I feel like I have to defend the FSU cameras a little. A lot of them were very well made at the time--it's just that most of them don't get CLA'd. If you buy a Leica a CLA seems like a small and worthwhile expense. Not so for a FED 2 you spent 20 bucks on. Judging a camera that's never been CLA'd against a family of cameras that are probably some of the most commonly CLA'd is a little unfair. Now obviously the engineering and workmanship is better on the Leicas, because it was literally some of the best work done in the camera world ever.... but most FSU cameras, especially in the old days, were pretty well-done on their own terms.
I encourage budding photographers who can't spare the money for a Leica, but who want a similar experience, to buy FED 2 or Zorki 4. They're cheap, they have good lenses and most of the repair can be done by amateurs. I had never worked on a FP shutter when I adjusted the curtain springs on my FED 2.
As for the lenses, nothing is as good as Leitz, but a lot of the Elmar magic is simply being a modified Tessar with an early coating... and guess what the Industars are? I have gotten beautiful performance out of the most basic Soviet lens, the 26m Red P. Sharpness? Not on the level of the Elmar. Flare performance? Probably inferior to the Elmar. Worth it for the cost? A thousand times over.
And honestly when you can get a Sonnar clone for 30 bucks do you need the quality to be right up to Leica standards?
Agreed. I have various FSU lenses, M39 and Contax mount, and the Industar offers the most modern rendering. In fact many decry them for being too neutral and sharp. My favourite 50 is the Helios 103, which manages to combine sharpness with character, however the Industar is permanently affixed to my Bessa and does the job very well.As for the lenses, nothing is as good as Leitz, but a lot of the Elmar magic is simply being a modified Tessar with an early coating... and guess what the Industars are?
Agreed. I have various FSU lenses, M39 and Contax mount, and the Industar offers the most modern rendering. In fact many decry them for being too neutral and sharp.
That is true. But consider that the body and lens likely need cleaning and mechanical adjustment. To use them reliably, you need to budget for the maintenance. 60plus year old cameras are not "cheap."A user Leica III body can be had for $150 or so. Incredibly cheap for what you get. Screw on the Elmar and it’s home where it belongs.
As I understand it, the Elmar is a modified Tessar with the aperture in a different space in the formula.
I should have made clear I was talking about the Lanthanum coated Industar 61D. This is notably superior to my other 61s, although all of them stand comparison with typical SLR lenses of similar vintage.I wouldn't have thought of "neutral" to describe the two Industar 26m I've shot with
Hmmm... I've done a search, and I found diagrams confirming this. The modifications from Tessar to Elmar appear to be in the glass, not the diaphragm. I wonder where I got that information...There likely is a misunderstanding or miswording. I do not know of any Tessar-type lens whith the aperture not in the 2nd air-space from the front.
Yes, I have considered buying one of the lanthane glass 61's myself. One little piece of trivia does interest me with those: is it true that the aperture only goes down to 16 rather than 22 as on the 26m? And are some of them clickstopped?I should have made clear I was talking about the Lanthanum coated Industar 61D. This is notably superior to my other 61s, although all of them stand comparison with typical SLR lenses of similar vintage.
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