The GXR-M seems to work well with most lenses and the restrictions and results seem more a factor of the lens itself than the camera body and M mount module.
This seems a silly statement as most of the chatter is about loading up your GXR-M with the finest lenses that money can buy.
What I mean is that if you do put a very expensive lens of outstanding performance on the module then you might expect outstanding performance and perhaps even push the GXR-M to its limits. The lesser sung story is that it will happily play with kit zoom lenses and produce images quite convincingly within the performance of that lens design.many sales of this EVIL type style of camera are made with modern kit zooms. Consequently you might think that those that were happy with a kit zoom, or even a higher quality zoom performance might be using their GXR-M with a manual zoom lens. But they are obviously not. Why? - simply because almost everyone that buys a GXR-M combination is from a separate market area. Zoom lenses interest another market segment entirely.
But this was not the real purpose of starting this thread. My purpose was to note carefully that quality manual lenses for slr cameras work fine as well. I am not rigorous enough to know precisely if there is any loss of performance from these lenses on the GXR-M but I might think not. You sacrifice a larger size to be able to use some of these older gems but nothing much more I speculate.
However I have just noticed another characteristic last night. I was photographing a fast-moving Roller Derby event last night. A test of any camera. I was dutifully using my Canon gear and including a 50mm f1.2 and a 200mm f2.0 lens. ISO 1600 all the way if you please. No way that somethig like a GRDIII and even an A12 50mm f2.5 would be struggling. f2.8 is about as slow as will cope with the movement in the light conditions, and it is not really good enough as my 70-200mm f2.8 always tells me.
Intrigued I wondered whether the GXR-M with either the Samsung 85mm f1.4 or Pentax 50mm f1.4 might work well enough. Manual focus and Roller Derby? Anyway I might have a few images that worked . I have now posted an example image (later). I think Mode1 focus assist and concentration on smooth focus adjustment does make moving target photography possible. With a GXR-M manual focus is possible in these situations if harder and more a test of personal skills.
What was very plain to me though is that in the situations where you are continually adjustimg focus to capture a moving object then the Samsung 85mm f1.4's heavily damped focus action is far too heavy for this type of work. Smooth and certain for non moving objects it is far too stiff for moving ones. The Pentax on the other hand was just about perfect. Just the right blend of smooth knife through warm butter and accuracy. Too loose amd it would not be accurate enough, too well damped and heavy and you just cannot keep up focus with that moving subject. When I came home I had to try the focus ring movement "feel" on my Rikenon 55mm f1.4 M42. Just as smooth and creamy as the Pentax, I wished I had taken it with me. Not much difference in the technical specifications but the Rikenon is physically much larger and I suspect just that much a finer lens for it.
I was just experimenting with a new technique and have not worked up any skills in that area. My sole object was to see if it were possible to do at all and not to make practised quality images.
I think it important test as I think that the GXR-M is on the cusp of being at least a semi-professional all rounder camera unit. But forget any manual lens that does not come with a very smooth lower resistance focus ring. In this regard even such lenses that might have a tiny focus ring "band" like a pancake lens would not work well. Give me the big wide grippy Takumar-style focus ring grip and it might just be something possible on a regular and consistent basis.
Of course only oddballs would ever wish to consider taking images of fast moving subjects with manual lenses (grin).
Tom






