Steven Lee
Member
I was on KEH earlier this week and I was pleasantly surprised to see how affordable GS-1 platform is, so I've added two more lenses to my kit: the 200mm and 250mm. They were in EX condition, around $400 for both.
When they arrived, I've decided to set up a test scene and carefully shoot it on all GS-1 lenses I have, using mirror lock-up and the remote. My observation of the results is that all PG-series lenses are easily competitive with their Hasselblad counterparts. Razor sharp wide open in the middle, as examined with a 10x lope or on the 8,000x8,000 scans. Looks like Bronica sacrificed some usability (varying sized front elements and corresponding filter sizes) for optical excellence, and their lenses are a bit shorter than Hasselblad's.
Speaking of unpleasant surprises, I could not get rid of shake blur with the 250mm lens at longer shutter speeds. I used MLU, I tried two different tripods, I even moved the camera to the back yard where I placed the tripod on concrete, and yet - when shutter speeds drop below 1/60s or so, I clearly see some shake blur in the images and it gets really visible at speeds of 1/4 and slower. That's a headscratcher.
When they arrived, I've decided to set up a test scene and carefully shoot it on all GS-1 lenses I have, using mirror lock-up and the remote. My observation of the results is that all PG-series lenses are easily competitive with their Hasselblad counterparts. Razor sharp wide open in the middle, as examined with a 10x lope or on the 8,000x8,000 scans. Looks like Bronica sacrificed some usability (varying sized front elements and corresponding filter sizes) for optical excellence, and their lenses are a bit shorter than Hasselblad's.
Speaking of unpleasant surprises, I could not get rid of shake blur with the 250mm lens at longer shutter speeds. I used MLU, I tried two different tripods, I even moved the camera to the back yard where I placed the tripod on concrete, and yet - when shutter speeds drop below 1/60s or so, I clearly see some shake blur in the images and it gets really visible at speeds of 1/4 and slower. That's a headscratcher.