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Voigtlander Nokton 60mm f/0.95 announced
#11
Considering that:
  • Cosina designed autofocus lenses in the past, including some with good optical quality, e.g. their 100mm f/3.5 macro
  • when Kyocera stopped the Contax N line, the lenses of which were autofocus, and their Contax venture altogether Cosina bought most of the lens manufacturing equipment and several Kyocera / Contax engineers joined Cosina
I would say that, if Cosina don't propose autofocus lenses under the Voigtländer brand, it's because they don't want to, not because they aren't capable of doing it.
#12
I've "read somewhere" (again; I know that's awfully vague but a cursory google search hasn't netted me the source) that their CEO doesn't like AF lenses. And he's a Leica fan. Smile So... we'll have to do without (I think we can have a consolation of Samyang branching into AF lenses, hooray).
#13
(02-20-2020, 01:36 PM)Rover Wrote: I've "read somewhere" (again; I know that's awfully vague but a cursory google search hasn't netted me the source) that their CEO doesn't like AF lenses. And he's a Leica fan. Smile So... we'll have to do without (I think we can have a consolation of Samyang branching into AF lenses, hooray).

Apparently he is: https://www.dpreview.com/news/9820180639...or-m-mount
#14
just a thought, Pentax made in the past a system that would make any lens an autofocus one by moving film plane, dunno why nobody is thinking of such an alternative, although obviously such an approach has its own drawbaks I expect mostly for tele lenses since the distance on which we can move the sensor is limited
#15
That approach is limited to cameras implementing it. I find the Techart approach way more interesting: turn a manual lens (in their case any M mount lens) into an AF lens (on Sony E) by moving the whole lens.

Never tried it myself, but heard from others that it actually works quite well.
Editor
opticallimits.com

#16
Out of curiosity, by how much does the lens need to be moved?
In other words, what is the maximum distance a lens would need to be moved (for most lenses, say from wide angle like 18mm to medium tele like 200mm)?
--Florent

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#17
I do not have a recollection of Pentax attempt. Moving film plane camera was made by Contax with AX model. It died soon as it was complex, costly and slow to focus. It also resulted in a very big camera for the time as it required complicated mechanical assembly. Lens AF technology itself proved to be way superiorin in every way.

Today, even less likely but for a kickstarter campaign. ;-)
#18
3 lenses I have with me which are pre-floating element, so easy to measure (not thaaat accurate with tape measure):
135mm lens. infinity to 150cm: 15mm
55mm lens: infinity to 150cm: 2mm
20mm lens: infinity to 150cm: 0.4mm

You can extrapolate from those.
Why to 150mm? That is the MFD of this 135mm lens.

Extra data:
55mm lens: infinity to 24.1mm (1:2): 28mm
20mm lens: infinity to 20cm: 3.5mm
#19
I just had a look at ebay - the Contax AX (with backplate AF) sells for quite an amazing amount of money. Collector's surcharge maybe.
Chief Editor - opticallimits.com

Doing all things Canon, MFT, Sony and Fuji
#20
(02-22-2020, 05:04 AM)Klaus Wrote: I just had a look at ebay - the Contax AX (with backplate AF) sells for quite an amazing amount of money. Collector's surcharge maybe.

Just checked, it's selling for 300-400$ not that high price
  


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