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You are here: Home / The Last Word / 50mm ‘lux, Nikkor-H on a7II — center MTF

50mm ‘lux, Nikkor-H on a7II — center MTF

February 2, 2015 JimK 1 Comment

I tested the on-center resolution of the subject of yesterday’s post, 2007 Leica 50mm f/1.4 Summilux and the 1952 Nikon 50mm f/2 Nikkor-H on the Sony alpha & Mark II (a7II).

Here’s the protocol:

  • Camera, lenses, RRS  generic plate
  • Landscape orientation
  • Arca Swiss C1 head
  • RRS TVC-44 legs.
  • Imatest SFRPlus target
  •  Focused using live view at the taking aperture.
  • Paul Buff Einstein strobe set to 5 watt-seconds, for the f/2 shots, 10 ws for the f/2.8 ones, 20 ws for the f/4 ones, following that progression until I got to f/16. The f/16 results were substantially identical, so I threw them away.
  • Hot shoe to PC adapter for synching
  • EFCS.
  • Images developed in Lightroom 5.7.1 with default settings, exported as TIFFs
  • measured on-axis MTF50 for horizontal and vertical edges in Imatest

The results, first for the horizontal edges:

The Summilux:

a7II-LuxMTF

The Nikkor (note that the vertical scale is different:

a7II-NikMTF

Both on the same graph:

a7II-bothMTF

The results for the vertical edges are not as high, since the a7II’s anti-aliasing filter in more aggressive from side-to-side than up-and-down, but the relationships are about the same:

a7II-bothMTFV

It’s clear that, in this case, you get what you pay for. It’s also clear that from f/8 on down, there’s little difference between the two lenses performance on the a7II. Even at f/5.6, they’re not that far apart. Wider than that, the Leica shines; actually, it’s a really impressive performance.

When I was using the S2 a lot in the 50s through the 80s, I never thought of the Nikkor-H as a bad lens. It was a bit soft wide open, but that seemed to give a nice look to some pictures. It is clear that the Summilux is in another league.

The Last Word

← The problem with stitching 50mm ‘lux, Nikkor-H on a7II — drawing and corner smear →

Comments

  1. Jean Pierre says

    February 2, 2015 at 10:43 am

    Well done Jim. If someone want to have a vignetting by shooting, the Nikkor-H is a value! The vignetting is decent and better, then in post processing! And with EVF you can see it …

    Reply

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