Difference between revisions of "Ultron"
(added photo of color-ultron) |
Hanskerensky (talk | contribs) m (Cosina Voigtländer now a page link) |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Ultron''' is the name of a lens designed by [[Voigtlander]], and later Zeiss. The name is used by the Cosina | + | '''Ultron''' is the name of a lens designed by [[Voigtlander]], and later Zeiss. The name is used by the [[Cosina Voigtländer]] lenses currently. |
{| class="floatright" | {| class="floatright" | ||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
|image_align= | |image_align= | ||
|image_text= Color-Ultron 50mm f1.8 lens <br> Zeiss made (7/6) | |image_text= Color-Ultron 50mm f1.8 lens <br> Zeiss made (7/6) | ||
− | |image_by= | + | |image_by= Alf Sigaro |
|image_rights= wp | |image_rights= wp | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 04:31, 3 February 2024
Ultron is the name of a lens designed by Voigtlander, and later Zeiss. The name is used by the Cosina Voigtländer lenses currently.
| ||
| ||
|
The original "Ultron" was a 50mm f/2.0 lens with 6 elements in 5 groups designed for the Voigtlander Prominent camera and introduced ca 1950. It was designed by A.W. Tronnier [1] as an improvement on his own Schneider-Kreuznach Xenon (c.a. 1937) design. Ultron lenses were also used in the Vitessa cameras, Vito III, Vitomatic and others as a high end option over the Skopar.
When Zeiss took over Voigtlander a further design improvement by Tronnier resulted in the Ultron 50mm f/1.8 used in the Icarex camera and also available in M42 mount (as Color-Ultron). This lens had an extra concave front element making it a 7 elements in 6 groups lens [2]
Contents
Cosina Voigtlander
The name Ultron was reused in the early 2000 by Cosina Voigtlander[3]
- 40mm f/2.0 Aspherical lens, a 6 element in 5 groups lens for SLRs.
- 35mm f/2.0, 35mm f/1.7, 28mm f/2.8 and Macro Ultron 35mm 1:2 for rangefinders and mirrorless cameras
Other makers
Other makers adopted lens formulas similar to the Ultron for their fast 50s, such as:
- Takumar 55/1.8 and later Pentax 50/1.7 (6 elements 5 groups)
- Nikkor 50/1.8 (6 elements 5 groups)
- Minolta Rokkor 50/1.7 and 58/1.4
Notes
- ↑ Patent for the Ultron lens as filed in the US
- ↑ Early fast lenses at www.klassik-cameras.de by Frank Mechelhoff
- ↑ Cosina Voigtlander official page