Go Back   Rangefinderforum.com > 35mm Film Range Finders > Zeiss Contax

Zeiss Contax Forum for the classic Zeiss Contax I, II, III, IIa, IIIa , G series, and if you want to push it, the nice Contax point and shoots. Some spill over from the Kievs, the Soviet copy of the Contax II/III can also be expected. Plus the ONLY production camera ever made in classic Zeiss Contax Rangefinder mount WITH TTL metering ... the Voigtlander Bessa R2C.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Post war Carl Zeiss SN 1608xxx - strange discoloration
Old 07-30-2012   #1
sparrow6224
Registered User
 
sparrow6224's Avatar
 
sparrow6224 is offline
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: New York NY
Posts: 846
Post war Carl Zeiss SN 1608xxx - strange discoloration

I'm not even sure if discoloration is the right word. Looking into the front of the lens w/o a light shining through, with diaphragm closed or partially closed, very plain to see all around the edge of the bottom of the front element or top of the next one, a scalloped pattern of reflective discoloration. Shine a light through the lens from either direction, you cannot see it. No light, there it is. Looking at it from the back -- again, no light, straight on I cannot see it; when I tilt the lens I see it as a dim shadow slightly darker than the glass around it. The pattern is as I say scalloped. Imagine that something leaked a little way into the lens all around the circumference of the element and stained it but only got 3-4 mm. It's like a second diaphragm closed down to f/2 or so.

Any ideas what this is? Again, keep in mind, with a light shining through, you cannot see it. Which I think eleminates haze, no? As would the pattern? And it's not fungus -- it really looks like a coating that only got washed on around the edges.

Oh, and, there's no "T" on the lens.

thanks for any ideas.
__________________
Best,
Vince



http://www.flickr.com/photos/commodiusvicus/
  Reply With Quote

Old 07-30-2012   #2
dexdog
sans bokeh
 
dexdog's Avatar
 
dexdog is offline
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 2,455
Not sure about the discoloration, but dos not sound like lens separtion or haze, both of which would show up strongly in light shown through the lens.

With regard to the other question,the Carl Zeiss lenses were not marked with a "T". The last post-WW2 lenses from West Germany to be marked with a "T" were the Zeiss-Opton lenses. Carl Zeiss lenses are coated, but not given a "T" marking because by 1954 or so, it was standard practice to coat all lenses, and the T was dropped.
__________________
_____________________
  Reply With Quote

Old 07-30-2012   #3
Jack Conrad
Registered User
 
Jack Conrad's Avatar
 
Jack Conrad is offline
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 1,312
Going by your description, I'd say it's separation.
  Reply With Quote

Old 07-30-2012   #4
sparrow6224
Registered User
 
sparrow6224's Avatar
 
sparrow6224 is offline
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: New York NY
Posts: 846
I have just taken a test roll that includes this lens, but not had a minute to develop it yet. How does separation affect the image? Ie what should I look for? Unhappy children? Sudden drop in grades? Father starts dating floozies?

Sorry, just kidding. Really, though what should one look for in the images?
__________________
Best,
Vince



http://www.flickr.com/photos/commodiusvicus/
  Reply With Quote

Old 07-31-2012   #5
Dez
Bodger Extraordinaire
 
Dez's Avatar
 
Dez is offline
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Posts: 579
Until the separation starts covering a significant portion of the area of the affected elements, you probably won't notice any effect. As it gets worse, you will start seeing a gradual and slight drop in resolution and contrast. i wouldn't worry.

Cheers,
Dez
  Reply With Quote

Old 08-01-2012   #6
S.H.
Picture taker
 
S.H.'s Avatar
 
S.H. is offline
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Near Bordeaux (France)
Age: 31
Posts: 361
Sadly, separation is not uncommon for Zeiss lenses of the period (Contax, Contarex lenses,...).

It can have no discernible effect : I have a Leica lens with a small separation dot (one or two mm2), it does not show on pictures.
__________________
some pictures
  Reply With Quote

Old 08-02-2012   #7
Highway 61
Revisited
 
Highway 61 is offline
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 1,093
This is separation due to the use of a synthetic epoxy-like cement instead of genuine Canada balsam at the factory. Like S.H. said, many lenses produced in the very late 1950's and early 1960's at the Oberkochen Carl Zeiss factory do suffer from this problem.

The case is very well documented on the Internet (including very hot threads on the photo forums). The problem can be cured (decementing of the separated elements, cleaning, recementing with modern and steady UV-curing optical cement with a perfect micrometric centering and alignment of the elements to cement) but the treatment will cost twice as much as what an unaffected Sonnar would cost.

As for the photographic results, separation enhances flare and reduces contrast. But the effect depends on how advanced the separation process is.
__________________

  Reply With Quote

Old 08-02-2012   #8
sparrow6224
Registered User
 
sparrow6224's Avatar
 
sparrow6224 is offline
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: New York NY
Posts: 846
Thank you all. I'll read more about it.
__________________
Best,
Vince



http://www.flickr.com/photos/commodiusvicus/
  Reply With Quote

Old 08-02-2012   #9
farlymac
PF McFarland
 
farlymac is offline
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: Roanoke, VA
Posts: 2,208
I don't have seperation on my Opton lens, but there is a lot of stuff going on in there. However, I've not seen anything in the photos that would indicate a problem. It takes a lot to cause total image degradation. Try to keep your lens out of extremes in temperature, and it should last a long time.

PF
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:25.


vBulletin skin developed by: eXtremepixels
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

All content on this site is Copyright Protected and owned by its respective owner. You may link to content on this site but you may not reproduce any of it in whole or part without written consent from its owner.