Ok, so what you are saying is that the lens doesn't actually focus at infinity but 30m ? I'm not sure if that is true in practice. When I bracket, at infinity everything very distance is razor sharp, while M is very sharp at distances from 10-30 meters. I couldn't get anything sharp at the N setting - even the ground with the camera low down.
in widelux 1500 i calculated 1/25 for COC which is 0.04 smaller so sharper but DOF is smaller. it depends what one thinks is sharp enough from A to B.
RS 65/70/220 also called Panoscope earlier 1987 i have one it was 65/70 then- till they changed name to avoid Panasonic conflict Seitz Sr. told me. sliot can slide between orbits to change distance. problem of all these cams is slitwidth and lens which is not adapted to curved film. none is so always not best results.
in W1500 there are huge sharpness-problems when focussed below 5m. not in Noblex. dont know if it has adjusted lens most probably slit is smaller than 3mm. RS has 3.5mm i reduced to 3mm thanks to a tip of chicago panorama-pro.
i see Noblex-lens has improved contrast than W1500. lenses of both at not at same height level- i have comparison made in a bank-entree. dont know which has lens a bit rised.
My repairman knows all about W1500-problems. he is the reason Panon improved and seems to have solved the banding-problem. but other parts are nonprecise. e.g. lens-film-distance is not adjusted. he had to shave upper or lower lenght of gate. i tested shooting with u-shape(cam mounted upside down) from a high building and comparing both shots cam normal and upside down. After the banding a second NOGO. Adorama refused to test( I had doubts) and Kubota/Panon-owner told to send them back. Had to pressuer him to send me replacement, the very same shit. One must live with that he told. Third parties made the parts! first was removing the discs pressing film on filmpressing-rollers at the ends. Big drama in 90ties till Widepan was born. Still has similar sickness. all said and can be read in rotatingpanoramiccameras.tk my forum.