In 1952 the Ernst Leitz company
established an overseas factory in Midland, Ontario, Canada. The company was called Ernst Leitz Canada and
produced a variery of items under the ELCAN (Ernst Leitz Canada) label. Leitz had always manufactured specialty items
vor the military and ELCAN was no exception.
In the 1960s they were aked by the US Navy to develop a high resolution
35mm camera system. This was based on the Leicaflex SL.
Photos: James L. Lager (ed.), Leica Illustrated History, Vol. II, 1994, p. 307, 309 and Vol. III, 1998, p. 319
Resolution, the ability of a
lens to project fine detail has always been a measure of great importance in
the evaluation of photographic lenses.
The following are excerpts from an article by Joseph A. Schantz, Assistant
Head of Research and Development Department at the Navel Photographic Center in
Washington, DC.
Research by optical glass manufacturers has resulted
in optical glasses having improved properties with respect to secondary color
aberration. Since this glass became
available lenses having complete color correction over an extended spectral
range have been developed for a Navy 35mm camera system.
Since 1963 the Navel Photographic Center and the Navel
Air Systems Command as a matter of continuous policy have expanded efforts to
upgrade 35mmphotography on a systematic basis.
The aim of this work was not only to improve the quality of documentary
and reported photography but also to improve intelligence collection
capabilities of the Navy’s cameras.
While most of this type of
photography by the Navy is classified, one application, according to a former
Navy officer, was in the Mediterranean. For
instance, US Navy ships often came into close contact with Russian Navy
vessels. It was common practice to shoot
a series of photographs of these ships during such encounters. The relative ease of operation of a 35mm
camera compared to medium format and even more so large format cameras proved
to render better photographs with 35mm equipment. It should be noted that the article by Mr.
Schantz was written prior to the advent of digital photography. However, the principles of lens design are
essentially the same in digital photography also. To get the necessary detail compared to
medium and large format photography it was necessary to develop a special, high
resolution 35mm camera system. Mr.
Schantz further writes:
It was recognized that the resolution of a lens is
limited in part due to a lack of correction of secondary colors. Based on the light refracting properties of
available optical glasses, most lenses can only bring two wavelengths to a
common focus. The optical designer must
choose these wavelengths to best suit the intended use of the lens. All other wavelengths are then focused in
planes predetermined by the properties of the glasses over which the designer
has no control.
Until the advent of extra low
dispersion glasses the only exceptions were apochromatic microscope lenses and
some telephoto lenses for 35mm camera systems which incorporated lens elements
made of calcium fluoride crystals or alum and some process lenses that used
large opposite powers in their element configuration. But these were limited to apertures of f/9 or
smaller.
Lenses utilizing elements
made of calcium fluoride have proven to be of very good performance. But they are not without drawbacks. Calcium fluoride unfortunately is very soft and
scratches easily. Therefore front
elements made of calcium fluoride usually are protected by a clear front glass
plate or a thin lens element made of conventional optical glass. Furthermore calcium fluoride has a rather
high temperature coefficient which means that it expands and contracts very
much during temperature changes. In some
instances this had led to calcium fluoride lens elements literally shattering
when objected to great temperature differences.
It is also the case that these elements do change their optical properties
during temperature changes which makes it necessary to allow lenses
incorporating such elements to be focused past the infinity mark. With other words, while the performance of
such lenses is quite high, this must be paid for with a number of drawbacks.
However, research has
produced optical glasses that do display the same or similar properties as
calcium fluoride, but without the above mentioned drawbacks. The first such glass was developed in the
late 60s and early 70s by the glass research laboratory at Ernst Leitz Wetzlar,
the maker of Leica cameras. Not until
approximately ten years later were similar glasses made available by other
glass manufacturers like Schott and Nikon.
These glasses are commonly referred to as extra low dispersion or fluor
crown glasses. They allow the easier
design and manufacture of apochromatic lenses.
Only true apochromats have the ability to focus all colors of the
visible spectrum at one common point.
Mr. Schantz further states:
A series of such apochromates has been designed and
manufactured under contract by Ernst Leitz Canada Ltd (Elcan). The lenses were designed by Professor Dr.
Walter Mandler. The lenses consist of:
Elcan-R 75mm f/2, Elcan-R 180mm f/3.4, Elcan-R 450mm f/5.6.
ELCAN 75mm f/2
Photo: L Camera Forum
180mm f/3.4 Apo Telyt
Schematic of the 180mm f/3.4
These lenses were designed for the Leica R cameras and
are color corrected from 400 to 900 nanometers.
These lenses permit photography in black and white, color and infrared
with the same focal setting. When
subjected to a series of filtered responses,(measurements with colored light)
of blue, yellow, red and infrared, the yellow, red and infrared responses were
grouped over a focal plane spread of only 0.02mm. (These are data for the 180mm f/3.4 which was
tested at maximum aperture. Initially a
classified piece of equipment, the lens later became available on the civilian
market as the 180mm f/3.4 Apo Telyt-R) The curve of the blue filter is shifted
0.07mm closer to the lens. The maximum
focal plane shift from blue to infrared is 0.09mm or ±0.045mm. If this lens is used only for daylight
operations (no infrared), the maximum focal plane shift is reduced to 0.08mm or
±0.04mm which is less than 1/2000 of an inch.
Considering the accuracies to which photographic cameras (from Leica)
are built, this tolerance falls within those specifications.
Most camera manufacturers
apply less stringent tolerances. The
industry average standard is 1/1000 of an inch, with a few manufacturers like
Canon, Nikon and Contax going to 1/1250 or 1/1500 of an inch. Leica cameras on the other hand continue to
be made to tolerances of 1/2500 of an inch or more precisely 1/100 of a
millimeter. Tolerances applied for the
manufacture of lenses often needs to be much smaller. Starting with the optical glass, Leica
applies a standard of ±0.0002% for the accuracy of the refractive index. This compares to the international standard
of ±0.001%. The accuracy of the Abbe
number, the measure for dispersion is ±0.2% for Leica compared to ±0.8%
internationally. For the manufacture of
individual lens elements Leica allows production tolerance of no more than ¼
lambda or ¼ of the average wavelength of light which corresponds to
approximately 0.00015mm. In comparison,
the tolerances applied by Minolta, for instance, are ½ lambda or 0.0003mm.
For comparison purposes the same procedure was
repeated with a representative sample of a high quality photographic achromatic
objective (only corrected for the primary spectrum). The Leica Elmarit-R 180mm f/2.8 lens was
stopped down to f/3.4 for the test. It
is strikingly evident that the different colors focus at quite different
locations on the lens axis. The maximum
focal plane shift from blue to infrared is 0.5mm compared to 0.09mm for the
180mm f/3.4 lens. This amounts to an
increase by a factor of 5.6. The maximum
focal plane shift under daylight conditions is 0.2mm as compared to 0.08mm for
the 180mm f/3.4 lens. This amounts to a
factor of 2.5 over the 180mm f/3.4 lens.
The most obvious advantage of the 180mm and the 450mm
lenses occur when high resolution films are used. The 180mm lens would outperform any other
lens with any type of photographic emulsion (or digital sensor)
The performance of the 180mm
Apo Telyt-R is well known and Mr. Schantz’s article only confirms the fact that
the 180mm f.3.4 Apo Telyt-R is one of the best lenses ever made.
Mr. Schantz writes the
following about films:
When the improved lenses were tested with regular fine
grain films, little improvement could be noticed over the performance of
regular good lenses.
Through the cooperation of film manufacturers a number
of film samples were tested for performance with the new lenses. Two classes of film emulsions gave promising
results. These classes were (a) high
definition aerial films and (b) high resolution document copy films.
These aerial films are fine grained, slow, high
contrast and have extended red sensitivity.
However, when processed as normally recommended by the manufacturer for
aerial use, they have too high contrast for general ground photography. The same holds true for the high contrast
copy films since they were designed for high contrast microfilming.
Kodak High Contrast Copy Film when processed in the
POTA developer of Marilyn Levy (Levy, M., “Wide Latitude Photography,” Science
and Eng. Vol. II Number I, January, February 1967) yield excellent high
resolution negatives with adequate film speed.
The Agfa High Contrast Copy film gives a practical combination of good
resolution and emulsion speed.
According to the research
done by Mr. Schantz, the best resolution obtainable with conventional film is
250 – 300 l/mm compared to 550 l/mm with the Agfa High Contrast Copy Film and
600 l/mm with Kodak 5069 and 3414 film.
Those are very impressive
figures. It was soon determined that in
order to make enlargements that would show this amount of detail, a special
enlarger was necessary. For that reason
Leitz made a modified version of their Focomat II enlarger where the standard
light source was replaced with a point light source. Only such illumination systems are capable to
reproducing extremely small detail from a negative.
The 35mm high resolution
camera system was classified material for several years.
Of the three lenses, the
180mm f.3.4 ELCAN lens proved to be the most practical one which resulted in a
declassification, allowing Leitz to make the 180mm part of their lens line for
the Leica reflex cameras. It entered the
market in 1975 as the 180mm f/3.4 Apo Telyt R.
Even today it ranks as one of the best lenses ever made for general
photography.
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I see no picture of the 450mm ELCAN lens.
ReplyDeleteIf one exists, I cannot find it anywhere.
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ReplyDeleteThank you very much.
DeleteI have this camera with different serial number and 3 lenses one is an 800mm. If anyone is interested in them my email is merlin@rabbitridge.com
ReplyDeleteVery good blog, thanks to the information shared by bloggers
ReplyDelete