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[OM] Hoods, and the 21/3.5 in particular [was old hoods just fade away]

Subject: [OM] Hoods, and the 21/3.5 in particular [was old hoods just fade away]
From: Moose <olymoose@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sat, 16 Jul 2005 00:09:43 -0700
There were a lot of posts on this, which lead me to summarize, speculate 
and comment.

It appears that there were actually three different hood versions for 
the 21/3.5. If like the other WA hoods, the first would be an all metal 
screw-in hood and the second a hood with metal base holding a rubber 
main portion. Finally, we know, was a rubber slip-on version.

So why, unlike the others, did a slip on rubber version appear later for 
the 21/3.5? Here's the speculation: The first Zuiko WAs were very 
unusual, and still largely are, for their very small size and 49mm 
filter threads. Certainly that all fits in with the OM gestalt of modest 
size and weight and common filter sizes. And it works just fine for the 
35, 28 and 24 mm lenses. But it gets a little dodgy with the 21.3.5. 
With the rather thin Oly filters, vignetting generally isn't a problem, 
but with some other brands, and polarizers in particular, it does become 
a problem.

None of the Oly screw-in hoods has threads to hold a filter, presumably 
to avoid vignetting, so the only way to use both filter and hood is to 
put the hood on the front of the filter. That, however, changes the 
spacial relationship between front node and hood in a way that makes 
vignetting more likely. About all that can be done with a screw-in hood 
is to have sort threads, to make sure it sits back as far as possible, 
and have it fall away from the 49 mm threads very fast, with as short a 
"tunnel" as possible, and the Oly screw-in hoods generally do this. My 
assumption is that this just wasn't enough for the 21/3.5, so another 
solution was used, a slip/clamp-on hood. With that design, the location 
of the hood is intended not to change with the use of filters. The hood 
is supposed to sit back on the front of the lens itself, not clamped to 
a filter, so the original, careful coverage design in unaltered by the 
use of a filter.

So that works fine with most filters, but not necessarily with 
polarizers. I don't have an old Oly 49 mm linear polarizer, but I'll bet 
the 21/3.5 hood will fit over it and fit properly on the lens. Back 
then, Oly took even the smallest details of system integration very 
seriously. Adjusting polarizers within a hood can be difficult on longer 
lenses, but the 21.3.5 hood is so wide and flat that it is no problem.

I have two 49mm polarizers, a decades old linear and a newish circular. 
Both have a knurled section and a smooth section. Now why the same brand 
would knurl the part that screws in on one and the part that you turn to 
adjust it on another I don't understand! In any case, on one, the 
knurling is too large in diameter for the hood to slip over it. With the 
other, the hood slips over fairly easily. this makes a very nice set-up, 
with the hood in its proper place and the polarizer easily adjusted. The 
one that fits is a Hoya "High-Quality Cir-Polarizing" filter 
manufactured in the Philippines that I bought in the last year or two on 
eBay. My cheap plastic digital caliper says the one that is too big is 
51.6 mm in diameter at the widest part. The one that does fit measures 
50.9mm.

Finally, a personal preference comment, to balance all the folks who 
dislike slip-on hoods. Slip-ons are my favorites. Now that's partly 
because they will work best with a filter or filters, as explained 
above. But mostly it's because the let me put the lens cap on with the 
hood on! I can't believe others don't also find this a big plus. Many of 
my lenses simply always have the hood on, and I like to be able to store 
and carry them with a lens cap on too, particularly where wind, dust 
and/or water tend to get on the front element. With some longer lenses, 
like the 85/2, 100/2.8, 135/4.5, 35-105/3.5-4.5, etc. it's pretty near 
impossible to use Oly caps with the hood on, but the wonderful center 
pinch Tamron caps work perfectly that way for the 55 mm size and the 
less wonderful, but functional, Hama caps work for 49 mm. so the 
35-105/3.5-4.5 sitting here on an OM-4 loaded with film is ready to go 
with both hood and cap on it.

Moose


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