Leitz 50mm f2 Summitar LTM Lens Condition: Mint/Mint-
Leitz 50mm f2 Summitar
(10% discount when bought with a Leica IIIg from FilmFurbish - refunded after checkout)
About this lens:
A beautiful lens in super near mint condition, the lens is clean and clear, no scratches or haze, which is exceptionally rare for these lenses, with almost none of the usual dust you would expect for a lens of this age that will make no impact on any image. Comes with a metal Leica lenscap and plastic body cap
Possibly the most desirable lens for the Leica LTM mount cameras producing sharp and characterful images.
10 blade lens with 7 elements.
Serial Number: 848154
Year if Manufacture: 1951
About the Leica 50mm f2 Summitar
The LEICA SUMMITAR 50mm f/2 is an extremely sharp lens in the center, and softer on the sides compared to LEICA's newest lenses. In most cases, no one will notice any difference.
The SUMMITAR replaced the earlier SUMMAR 50mm f/2, which was the hot, must-have LEICA lens from 1933-1939. This SUMMITAR was in turn repalced by the improved SUMMICRON in 1952.
This SUMMITAR uses much larger front optical components than the SUMMAR for greatly reduced mechanical vignetting for less light falloff.
Additionally, the new front optical component of this SUMMITAR is now two cemented elements, replacing the single front element of the older SUMMAR.
Without the adapter, this SUMMITAR works flawlessly on all traditional (screw-mount) LEICAs, like the popular LEICA IIIf & IIIg
The SUMMITAR was uncoated prior to World War II, and was coated from about 1946 (about serial nr. 601,001).
The SUMMITAR originally had a 10-bladed diaphragm, which was changed back to the complex 6-bladed design of the previous SUMMAR (1933-1939) in 1950.
7 elements in 4 groups.
Herein lies the secret of the SUMMITAR's performance: most other 50mm f/2 lenses, like Nikon's 5cm f/2 for their contemporary rangefinder cameras, have never used more than 6 elements.
There are no aperture click stops. LEICA didn't invent them until 1953 with the SUMMICRON