Having written positively about the Zeiss - especially with the Leitax adapter and hence tripod mount - earlier in the threadI do have to endorse JKoerner's assessment that the Voigtlander 125 makes the Zeiss unnecessary .... wider range of applications and just superb all around.
Foolishly i sold mine to fund an M240 and have missed it ever since and all of the available ones seem to be missing a part or dubious in one way or another - now that for me is an incomparable lens ... but despite being more comfortable to handle than the Zeiss would still benefit from a tripod mount for us "oldies" !
We agree, John, thanks for your input.
I purchased both lenses (Zeiss 135mm f/2 Apo Sonnar T* ZF.2 and the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo-Lanthar SL Macro) based on Michael Erlewine's recommendations. Both performed as he stated. However, Michael and I disagree on their respective usefulness.
In the case of the Voigtländer, I was using a Sigma 180 f/2.8 macro (for its AF capability), at the time I read Michael's review ... and, after buying the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Macro, and experimenting for
my needs, I decided to upgrade my Sigma 180 to a Nikkor 300mm VR II, while replacing with the MF Voigtländer as my dedicated macro lens.
There have been many field-instances where the Nikkor 300mm + 2xTC enables me to capture "macro" shots ... from 7-10 feet away ... that I would never be able to capture whilst trying to get close enough with my "macro" lens to achieve the same framing. However, for "
close-stacking field macro opportunities," the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo is a peerless tool ... and I thank Michael for turning me on to this lens.
That said, it was with this same open mind that I believed I might incorporate the Zeiss 135mm f/2 Apo Sonnar T* ZF.2 into my lens stable as well, trusting Michael's review. However, while I truly do believe Michael's opinion of the lens
was justified, the lens itself is just not a very useful tool to me, as a wildlife photographer. Where the Voigtländer Apo
could do things my other lenses could
not do ... at the end of the day there was
nothing the Zeiss 135mm could do that I couldn't do as well (or better) with another lens choice.
With regard to sharpness, it was very close, with the advantage to the Zeiss. However, because of the Zeiss' min. focus distance being 2' away, this impediment proved to be "a buzz-kill" to me ... because
the Voigtländer can get right up there to a subject
and achieve 1:1 magnification. Here, again, is the image I took with the Zeiss (from about 2' away), which is the closest I could get with the Zeiss:
(
Zeiss 135 Apo: Click on the image, then click-again, for full-size view)
In comparison, here is another mantid image that I took, this morning, using the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo-Lanthar SL Macro from the same 2-feet away:
(
Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo: Click on the image, then click-again, for full-size view)
Both images were taken at f/4, again from the same 2-foot distance. The fact is, the Voigtländer compares very favorably with the Zeiss. Further, with the Voigtländer, I can get even closer ... and achieve a true 1:1 magnification ... so whatever (minor) resolution-advantage the Zeiss has
is gone ... because,
at 1:1 I have far more pixels covering the subject. Yet, if you look at the above crops, the Voigtländer compares very favorably to the Zeiss even handicapping it by conforming to the Zeiss' distance limitations. Below are full-sized views of these 100% crops of the above two images:
Zeiss 135 Apo 100% Crop @ f/4Voigtländer 125mm Apo 100% Crop @ f/4Thus, for me, there was no justification to hang onto the Zeiss. It was essentially just 2 lb of extra weight in my lens pouch ... offering me
nothing I couldn't already get (as good or better) with the lenses that "made the team" and have proven their worth to remain in my bag.
None of the other 135mm options can touch what the Voigtländer 125mm f/2.5 Apo-Lanthar SL Macro can do as an all-around field tool. IMO, this is precisely because they cannot get anywhere near 1:1, while the Voigtländer can, and (even operating within the other lenses' limitations), the Voigtländer can rock-and-roll with any of them as a short-telephoto as well.
Indeed, you really have to split-hairs to find a performance difference (at standard focal lengths) between the Voigtländer 125mm and the available 135 options ... but when it comes to
getting close ... the Voigtländer blows them all out of the water. No 'crop' from any of these other lenses can match what the Voigtländer can achieve at 1:1.
Jack