ปีผลิต
-
ผลิตที่
Japan
สูตรเลนส์
7 elements in 5 groups (double-Gauss with an extra rear converging element).
อัปเดต
1 ก.ค. 2569
M42 · 55mm · f/1.4
ปีผลิต
-
ผลิตที่
Japan
สูตรเลนส์
7 elements in 5 groups (double-Gauss with an extra rear converging element).
อัปเดต
1 ก.ค. 2569
The Auto Sears 55mm f/1.4 is one of many rebadged variants of a single-formula lens manufactured by the famous Japanese optical firm Tomioka, which supplied it under numerous marques including Mamiya-Sekor, Chinon, Rikenon, Revuenon, Cosina, Porst (in Germany) and Sears (in the USA). According to reviewers, it is 'almost certainly a knock off of the legendary Carl Zeiss Pancolar 55mm f/1.4' — a claim strengthened by the fact that Tomioka had a very close working relationship with Zeiss at the time and even manufactured Japanese Zeiss lenses. The design is a standard double-Gauss with an extra converging element at the rear (seven elements in five groups), and like the Pancolar it is described as radioactive (thorium glass). Multiple named variants exist; this Sears is described as the earliest version. Its cult following stems from the widely repeated observation that its performance — sharpness, contrast and bokeh — is 'nearly identical' to the far more expensive and uber-rare Zeiss Pancolar, at roughly 3% of the price. One reviewer who owned both concluded he would never have bought the Pancolar had he known. No established nickname for this specific lens is evidenced in the reviews, though the broader Tomioka fast-fifties are noted for 'bags of character' and being 'radioactive.'
สรุป: The Auto Sears 55mm f/1.4 is a Tomioka-made 'poor man's Pancolar' — a rebadged double-Gauss with radioactive glass that reviewers say delivers sharpness and distinctive bokeh nearly indistinguishable from the coveted Zeiss Pancolar 55mm f/1.4 at a tiny fraction of the price. It's ideal for character-seeking manual-focus shooters and Pancolar admirers on a budget, provided they accept mild sample variation and a focal length that runs slightly short.
โบเก้สวยงาม พร้อมรูปทรงดิสก์นอกโฟกัส (OOF) ที่เป็นเอกลักษณ์ ซึ่งใกล้เคียงกับของ Pancolar มาก แตกต่างเพียงเล็กน้อยในเรื่องการถ่วงน้ำหนักของความสว่างภายในดิสก์ และไม่มีการอ้างถึงเอฟเฟกต์สวิร์ล (swirl)
ให้ความคมชัดสูงมากและแทบจะเหมือนกับ Pancolar มีความแตกต่างเล็กน้อยระหว่างกึ่งกลางกับขอบภาพ และมีความคลาดสี (CA) ปรากฏในภาพทดสอบเป้าหมาย
ความเปรียบต่างถูกอธิบายว่าแทบไม่ต่างจาก Zeiss Pancolar และโดยรวมถือว่าดี
The Auto Sears 55mm f/1.4 is one of many rebadged variants of a single-formula lens manufactured by the famous Japanese optical firm Tomioka, which supplied it under numerous marques including Mamiya-Sekor, Chinon, Rikenon, Revuenon, Cosina, Porst (in Germany) and Sears (in the USA). According to reviewers, it is 'almost certainly a knock off of the legendary Carl Zeiss Pancolar 55mm f/1.4' — a claim strengthened by the fact that Tomioka had a very close working relationship with Zeiss at the time and even manufactured Japanese Zeiss lenses. The design is a standard double-Gauss with an extra converging element at the rear (seven elements in five groups), and like the Pancolar it is described as radioactive (thorium glass). Multiple named variants exist; this Sears is described as the earliest version. Its cult following stems from the widely repeated observation that its performance — sharpness, contrast and bokeh — is 'nearly identical' to the far more expensive and uber-rare Zeiss Pancolar, at roughly 3% of the price. One reviewer who owned both concluded he would never have bought the Pancolar had he known. No established nickname for this specific lens is evidenced in the reviews, though the broader Tomioka fast-fifties are noted for 'bags of character' and being 'radioactive.'