08-01-2012
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#26
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.... _ is offline
Join Date: Jun 2012
Posts: 104
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well yes it's mostly guesswork but zeiss had problems with its sensor covers cracking. Who knows, maybe there is a little over engineering built in for ruggedness of a "Pro" rated camera.
Anyhow, interesting thread with some good examples of what the problem really is.
I came across another page showing some more examples comparing gxr to x-pro1:
http://www.mielkephoto.com/2012/04/f...arison-photos/
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08-01-2012
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#27
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Registered User
aleksanderpolo is offline
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Thanks for finding the test. So in this test the 18/2 which is known to have very soft corner is better than 25/2.8 which is one of the best zm, well...
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08-01-2012
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#28
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Registered User
Matus is offline
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The linked examples suggest (to me) that one should probably look elsewhere (than X-Pro 1) for wide angle M-mount lenses. For example Ricoh GXR 
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08-01-2012
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#29
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Registered User
GaryLH is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aleksanderpolo
Hey Tony,
The GXR definitely quenched my desire to get the XP1 for M-lenses. The focus assist mode 2, the three different magnification (2x,4x,8x), the more responsive EVF (the one that olympus used), the microlenses optimized for wide M (the CV15 on GXR has sharp corner at f8 at 100% crop, you can check the picabroad link and see that it doesn't on XP1). Only drawback is that it has slow buffer and slow shot to shot time, and of course its high ISO is not as good as Fuji. But at base ISO it has a clarity that is stunning, due to the lack of AA filter and the use of traditional bayer layout.
The appeal of XP1 to me is primarily the native 35/1.4. Hey, perhaps you can rent them both to see it for yourselves, as you will be using primarily M-lenses? Different people have different expectation/requirement of sharpness. I don't think these kind of "it's sharp enough" "No it's not" discussion is going to settle it for you. 
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I have both the Ricoh gxr and the xp1. The gxr is the camera to use for native Leica lenses. The main reason I use the xp1 w/ adapted rf lenses is really to fill in the holes in the lens lineup... When the 14mm and 56 mm native lenses come out, then the for me the gaps will be mostly filled except for a 16mm for which the 15vc is the closest.
Right now on my gxr the 35 cron v4 is just about permanently attached to it. The only thing about the gxr that bothers me is the slower flash write speed compared to the xp1.
If using only Leica rf lenses, the gxr is the way to go...
Gary
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08-01-2012
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#30
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Registered User
rbelyell is offline
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Posts: 805
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gary it appears, or maybe it just appears to me, that implicit in your post is the fuji at its best (with native lenses) outperforms the gxr at its best (with very good m mount lenses). is that your judgement?
tony
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08-01-2012
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#31
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Registered User
GaryLH is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rbelyell
gary it appears, or maybe it just appears to me, that implicit in your post is the fuji at its best (with native lenses) outperforms the gxr at its best (with very good m mount lenses). is that your judgement?
tony
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I am not sure if I would think of it that way. More like I use the camera for different purposes. I really view it more as situations where I want to use af and the xp1, u are going to get the most out of Fuji with its native lenses since they are designed to work with their sensor whereas to adapt a Leica rf lens is going to e more hit and miss with a lot depending on focal length, how close rear element is to sensor and how picky u are in respect the the results.
The gxr is really designed for rf lenses. The end result from gxr with wide angles is going to be much better than the xp1..
The main point I was really trying to get at was if u want Leica rf lenses on a digital camera and it is not a M8 or 9 and u are not really interested in AF, the gxr is really the better way to go.
The gxr has many things going for it...
- lighter more compact body
- two modes of focus peaking
- 3 levels of magnification mode for more precise focusing
- electronic shutter mode, u think a leaf shutter is quiet 
- micro lenses specifically designed to handle wide angle rf lenses
- inf focus is dead on without it zone or hyper focus is questionable
- no anti-aliasing filter
Hope that clarifies what I was trying to say
Gary
Last edited by GaryLH : 08-01-2012 at 16:22.
Reason: Fixing missing text portions
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08-01-2012
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#32
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Registered User
rbelyell is offline
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thanks a lot gary, your insight has been very very helpful.
tony
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08-03-2012
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#33
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.... _ is offline
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One question about this. Are we really sure the problem is due to ONLY the thickness of the filter? The camera M-Mount adapter would appear to have correction software for each lens being used on it. So can that software correction be at least partly the cause of the smearing. i.e. is it really upto the job.
I ask because it would seem likely that using a lens filter on any wide angle lens might do the same but they don't seem to. Or do they?
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08-14-2012
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#34
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.... _ is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tog
One question about this. Are we really sure the problem is due to ONLY the thickness of the filter? The camera M-Mount adapter would appear to have correction software for each lens being used on it. So can that software correction be at least partly the cause of the smearing. i.e. is it really upto the job.
I ask because it would seem likely that using a lens filter on any wide angle lens might do the same but they don't seem to. Or do they?
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I've been thinking about this. Dangerous I know, but what happens if you put a zeiss 25/2.8 on the fuji M-mount adapter and then tell the adapter you are using a 50/2 or an 85/2. Does the smearing get worse or better?
Has anyone tried or would anyone like to try and see what happens.
My theory, and it is just a theory is that the fuji software is designed to correct any distortion in fuji lenses. But the zeiss doesn't have any so needs no correction. If the software isn't optimised properly for the zeiss 25/2.8 then maybe lying to the camera may reduce the distortion correction which could just possibly be part of the problem.
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08-14-2012
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#35
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Registered User
aleksanderpolo is offline
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non-native prime do not have distortion profile in their raw, so the distortion correction is not to be blamed.
The Zeiss article has a pretty clear discussion about how the cover glass right on top of the sensor is causing problem. Whether the problem is significant for individual user is a different matter, however.
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08-14-2012
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#36
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.... _ is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aleksanderpolo
non-native prime do not have distortion profile in their raw, so the distortion correction is not to be blamed.
The Zeiss article has a pretty clear discussion about how the cover glass right on top of the sensor is causing problem. Whether the problem is significant for individual user is a different matter, however.
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All theories need to be tested even if only to prove they are wrong. Such a simple test to do if you have the kit at hand.
And I'm not suggesting there isn't a problem due to thickness of filter but that just maybe there is some software processing which isn't helping as it should. And what happens if you send image to jpeg and not raw.
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11-28-2012
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#37
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rjx is offline
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Let's say I wanted to use a Zeiss 21mm Distagon T* ZF (Nikon) or ZE (Canon) on the X-PRO1 w/ the appropriate converter. Would those lenses work well with zero to minimal smearing? 21mm lens on the XP1 would be a 31.5 FOV.
Thanks.
__________________
“In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv.” Henri Cartier-Bresson
“Photos are everywhere. You just have to know how to look.” Chris Weeks
"A camera is just an instrument to help people see without a camera." Dorothea Lange
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11-28-2012
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#38
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Registered User
aleksanderpolo is offline
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Distagon and DSLR lens in general should not have any smearing problem.
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Is this a real-world problem? |
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11-28-2012
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#39
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Skeptic
Jamie Pillers is offline
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Location: Oakland, California
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Is this a real-world problem?
Quote:
Originally Posted by rjx
Let's say I wanted to use a Zeiss 21mm Distagon T* ZF (Nikon) or ZE (Canon) on the X-PRO1 w/ the appropriate converter. Would those lenses work well with zero to minimal smearing? 21mm lens on the XP1 would be a 31.5 FOV.
Thanks.
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Is this "smearing" problem, so often thrown out there these days when discussing mf lenses on mirrorless cameras, anything worth worrying about. Has anyone seen a real print from this camera/lens combination. No comment I've read on the web about this "smearing" mentions how prints on the wall look. I get a strong feeling that this "smearing problem" is just the usual junk from armchair pixel peepers. Anyone here have real world experience making big prints that look bad?
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Go outside and talk to someone today.
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11-28-2012
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#40
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Registered User
rjx is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aleksanderpolo
Distagon and DSLR lens in general should not have any smearing problem.
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Thanks. That's what I assumed. But sometimes my assumptions are wrong. BTW, I forgot Zeiss released the Distagon T* 25mm f/2.8 for ZE and ZF. So I'd probably select that one since I was originally hoping to use the Biogon 25mm f2.8 in the first place 
__________________
“In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv.” Henri Cartier-Bresson
“Photos are everywhere. You just have to know how to look.” Chris Weeks
"A camera is just an instrument to help people see without a camera." Dorothea Lange
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11-28-2012
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#41
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Skeptic
Jamie Pillers is offline
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Oakland, California
Posts: 2,866
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rjx
Thanks. That's what I assumed. But sometimes my assumptions are wrong. BTW, I forgot Zeiss released the Distagon T* 25mm f/2.8 for ZE and ZF. So I'd probably select that one since I was originally hoping to use the Biogon 25mm f2.8 in the first place 
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Good to see you'll be able to use the Biogon.
By the way, I just did a quick look at flickr photos made with the x-pro1 and wide-angle M-mount lenses. I came across a photographer using the Voigtlander 15mm lens and, at flickr image sizes, they look GREAT! If there's any so-called smearing going on, it seems inconsequential to the final image.
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Go outside and talk to someone today.
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11-28-2012
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#42
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Registered User
rjx is offline
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Location: Santa Clara, California (Bay Area)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jamie Pillers
Is this "smearing" problem, so often thrown out there these days when discussing mf lenses on mirrorless cameras, anything worth worrying about. Has anyone seen a real print from this camera/lens combination. No comment I've read on the web about this "smearing" mentions how prints on the wall look. I get a strong feeling that this "smearing problem" is just the usual junk from armchair pixel peepers. Anyone here have real world experience making big prints that look bad?
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I wouldn't call myself a pixel peeper. I don't spend my time looking at test charts. I'm more concerned with real world results.
I'm actually just learning about the smearing issue. I found this thread searching on google for XP1 photographers using the Biogon 25mm f2.8.
IMO it's not like looking at charts, or nitpicking over 100+% crops. If I can see significant "smear," or "blur," or whatever it is, in one or more sections of an image on the computer monitor. Wouldn't it only become more noticeable the larger the print size?
__________________
“In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv.” Henri Cartier-Bresson
“Photos are everywhere. You just have to know how to look.” Chris Weeks
"A camera is just an instrument to help people see without a camera." Dorothea Lange
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11-29-2012
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#43
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Moderator
jsrockit is offline
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: NYC
Age: 39
Posts: 11,785
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rjx
If I can see significant "smear," or "blur," or whatever it is, in one or more sections of an image on the computer monitor. Wouldn't it only become more noticeable the larger the print size?
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Yes. It really depends on the photograph if it'll be an issue. Portraits in the center of a frame with nothing of interest at the edges of the frame? Most likely ok even in big prints. A photo of a store front where everything should be in focus? Most likely an issue in a big print. It's all about your expectations and what you are photographing. Any lens can be used to make a great photo (even "bad" ones). However, is it the right lens for what you want to accomplish generally speaking...
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03-15-2013
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#44
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Registered User
rjx is offline
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Location: Santa Clara, California (Bay Area)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jamie Pillers
Good to see you'll be able to use the Biogon.
By the way, I just did a quick look at flickr photos made with the x-pro1 and wide-angle M-mount lenses. I came across a photographer using the Voigtlander 15mm lens and, at flickr image sizes, they look GREAT! If there's any so-called smearing going on, it seems inconsequential to the final image.
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Hi Jaimie
Sorry for the late reply, I'm going through a folder of older links I saved.
Do you by chance remember which users images you were looking at? I'd like to see.
Thanks.
__________________
“In photography, the smallest thing can be a great subject. The little, human detail can become a Leitmotiv.” Henri Cartier-Bresson
“Photos are everywhere. You just have to know how to look.” Chris Weeks
"A camera is just an instrument to help people see without a camera." Dorothea Lange
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03-15-2013
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#45
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Registered User
ilia is offline
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 89
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I have some examples from biogon 4.5/21; I've seen nothing wrong with images, butyou gays might be more picky, let me know I'l email/post some samples
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