> This related link should also be read: Single versus Multi-coated
> Lenses  http://medfmt.8k.com/mf/flare.html

These are very hoary old arguments left over from decades ago. While there
is much more difference between single coating and no coating at all than
there is between single coating and multi-coating, there is no doubt that,
if you're looking for the last increments of best quality, multi-coating is
useful.

Of course, certain manufacturers make liberal use of single coating. What do
you think Nikon's "IC" stands for? Integrated Coating. Why "integrated"?
Because it's applied in a single layer. In other words, some Nikkors are
single-coated or partially single-coated...to this day. Some Canon lenses
are too. In fact, many cheap lenses are single coated, and most of then are
indeed "good enough." On Nikon's and Canon's _better_ lenses, however, they
use multi-coating where they can't get away with single layers.

And yet, as we've seen recently, when _Popular Photography_ wants to do an
article on shooting into the sun, what do they use? Old SMC Taks.

Note also that lenses are not "single coated" or "multi-coated." We refer to
them as thought they're one or the other. Many lenses, in fact, employ both
techniques simultaneously in the same lens (and in many cheaper lenses,
certain surfaces may not be coated at all). When the lens maker Angenieux
(the French Panavision, essentially) made a few "carriage trade" 35mm lenses
in the 1970s and '80s, they took the innovative step of multi-coating every
single surface. This was unusual enough at the time to be remarkable.

What makes Zeiss lenses special? Zeiss has been using some of the same basic
block designs for decades now. It's its T* coatings (still very similar to
SMC) that make the difference.

You can make great pictures with any lens at all, including single-coated
ones. However, I know people who've done direct comparison tests between
Pentax, Zeiss, Nikon and Canon lenses directly into the sun, and the
multi-coated lenses handle these extreme situations better, no question.

Overall, flare is not a huge problem with lenses these days. Whether one
should care whether one's lenses are multi-coated or not is an individual
matter. But one thing's for sure: with the very best lenses, you won't see
the makers trying to get by with single coating, or with multi-coating only
on a few surfaces.

--Mike

 

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