jimgalli
Subscriber
Thought the folks here might enjoy this little sketch of the 3 cross sections seen together. I've been curious for a long time about how the Plastigmat was actually different from it's more costly brother the Protar. I had concluded that B&L likely changed the Protar just enough to not get sued for patent license infringement and changed the name to Plastigmat calling it their own design. It turns out the Plastigmat is much closer to the Dagor than the Protar! The 4rth glass in the P-mat seems to have corrected it better to be used as a single and Bausch & Lomb always provided 2 aperture scales calling it a symmetrical convertible. A double convertible but never a triple like the Protar that could have different lengths at each end. I've shot with a single element of a Dagor before but it really isn't good enough to be thought of as a viable convertible lens. In the drawing it's easy to see the Plastigmat is simply a Dagor with the entry end glass divided into 2 elements.