My first S.L.R was a Craptica Super T.L. Ian with a Zeiss Pancolor and the lens after about a year became so stiff it was very difficult to focus, the repair guy said it was because the focusing helicoid was Aluminium and had worn and would only get worse, so I got rid of it and got a Pentax 50mm 1.8 lens.My experience of East German lenses is otically they are excellent (except the Domiplan), actually the mechanics aren't bad either but there lubricants were awful, Russian lenses are similar. I has an optically superb Pancolor on a Prakticamat (first TTL meter camera on sale in the UK) but the iris diaphragm was inconsistent and n ever stopped down to quite the same aperture as it was set at.
Aside from the East German Meyer & Zeiss lenses I was thinking of the poor quality of many cheaper Japanese lenses which despite often better build quality were optically way behing the East German lenses.
You worked in the retail trade and must have had quite a lot of customer feedback over the years, I know that the one dealer I used (my Ilford Professional supplier) was very particular about what lenses they sold, he'd been involved as an importer with a high end camera company. It was and still is a bit hit and miss unless you can road test a lens first. We were constantly loaned MF and sometimes LF equipment to try before we bought, I had an RB67 system to try for a month late 1970's and was allowed to try LF lenses before buying, or they were sold on a sale or return basis if we weren't happy when second-hand.
Ian
I too worked in the photographic retail trade for nearly 25 years, and got far too much customer feedback, however I do remember talking to the Hasselblad rep. at a trade show at Olympia who told me that his company test all the lenses that they get from Zeiss Oberkochen, and have to return around 40% of them because they are below the required performance standard they require.
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