fadedpastels
Member
same here nice and sharp all aroundI guess I was lucky. I'm happy with my 55, bought secondhand.
same here nice and sharp all aroundI guess I was lucky. I'm happy with my 55, bought secondhand.
Inspired by this thread, I worked on my 180mm Super lens. As I mentioned above, this lens was rather disappointing in sharpness and I had a suspicion it hed been tampered with. To test it, I made a lens board out of MDF that enabled me to mount the lens on a Durst M805 enlarger. Using a Tmax400 negative, raising the enlarger to approx 120cm, I could focus on the grain.
I noticed that I got best grain sharpness after removing the 3 shims behind the front lens element.
After removing these 3 shims, I made new test photos with my usual test setup, the church at 195 meter from my window. These are now excellent, with superb sharpness even at full aperture! So removing those 3 shims did the trick and the lens is now "super" as it should be.
After getting a 55mm wide angle for my Mamiya C330f I have to say I'm unimpressed with the corners. They don't ever seem to resolve, no matter what aperture I use.
Is the 65mm a better option?
The 80, 135 and 180mm I own are very sharp with great corner detail, very little to non existent chromatic abberation, highly competent lenses - then there's the 55mm. It's sharp in the centre zones but the corners will not resolve.
Did you ever own a 55mm lens? Was yours as bad as I describe?
I have two copies of this lens. One is superb, and the other merely excellent. I understand that this lens was subject to considerable variation in performance, not uncommon in lens production.
My 180mm is rather poor; maybe this lens has been tampered with... but it still makes fine portraits.
Inspired by this thread, I worked on my 180mm Super lens. As I mentioned above, this lens was rather disappointing in sharpness and I had a suspicion it hed been tampered with. To test it, I made a lens board out of MDF that enabled me to mount the lens on a Durst M805 enlarger. Using a Tmax400 negative, raising the enlarger to approx 120cm, I could focus on the grain.
I noticed that I got best grain sharpness after removing the 3 shims behind the front lens element.
After removing these 3 shims, I made new test photos with my usual test setup, the church at 195 meter from my window. These are now excellent, with superb sharpness even at full aperture! So removing those 3 shims did the trick and the lens is now "super" as it should be.
I agree if you have the 80 mm f2.8 lenses the 65 mm lenses are a waste of money, which is why I never bought one.I started with a 65mm but replaced it with the 55mm. It had nothing to do with image quality but had to do with angle-of-view. The 65 was not wide enough for me but the 55 was. The 55/80/180 was my standard wedding and portrait kit.
From what I have read the 180mm Super is the sharpest lens of all. The regular 180 is not so much but like you said probably nice for portraits.
I agree if you have the 80 mm f2.8 lenses the 65 mm lenses are a waste of money, which is why I never bought one.
I owned the regular (chrome) 180, then sold the old 180 for the 180 super...
The "super" is ultra sharp but then i have a portrait made with the regular 180 that is also really sharp (at F11).
I feel that the early 180 had better bokeh. In the end I sold the 180 super and bought again an old chrome nose 180mm !!!
On the other hand the "super" is a bit more compact and light.
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