Review by Tom
Shea. © 2006.

I was unimpressed
by the first advertisements and reviews of the Contax AX
body, which autofocuses by changing the lens-to-film distance.
Contax seemed like a nitch player desperately trying to
tack a convoluted AF system onto their manual focus lenses.
However, I was interested in high quality construction and
I did some research on Contax equipment. I became impressed,
not only by the quality of the Carl Zeiss T* lenses, but
by the cameras themselves. As a result I added a Contax
system to my Canon EOS. Here are my thoughts on the AX.
Construction
The AX is a solid
camera. It is heavy and big. It weighs 1080 grams without
the battery. Particularly, it is deep (72 mm from front
to back) in order to accommodate the camera within the camera
that must move back and forth to accomplish autofocusing.
It is well constructed with high quality materials. The
finish is beautiful and smooth. The controls have a very
solid feel with just the right amount of resistance for
me. It operates positively with good feedback to the photographer.
There is no doubt about what the camera is doing. All of
the controls (mostly conventional knobs and levers) are
really electronic rather than mechanical. There are no loose
levers and no free play or wobble in the knobs. The construction
is positive and solid throughout. To achieve this Contax
starts with aluminum alloy chassis that is quite rigid.
The top cover is titanium.
Autofocus
Even without
autofocus, the AX would be an excellent camera. The autofocus
system is the center of attention because of its unique
approach to focusing in 35 mm photography. Adjusting the
distance between the lens and the film plane by moving the
film plane is old hat to large format users, but the AX
is the first application of this method to the 35mm format.
The principle is simple, in order to focus on a subject,
one can either use the lens to focus or one can move the
film plain. In the AX the body does most of the focusing
work, not the lenses.
It works like
this. In order to focus, the film plane moves back and forth.
But for the system to work, the film plane must be accompanied
in its travels by the mirror box and the prism/viewfinder
assembly. The distance that the film plane moves must be
very precise.
There are two
big problems Kyocera had to master: (1) how to move the
assembly precisely enough; (2) how to move the assembly
quickly enough. Relying on its extensive expertise with
ceramics, Kyocera developed a ceramic guide rod for this
inner assembly to ride on. A ceramic tube slides along the
guide rod, providing the necessary precision. Ceramics are
almost as hard as diamond, ensuring long life and continuing
precision. Thus, the assembly can move precisely enough.
The second big
question that strikes almost everyone is how in the heck
can you move the weighty assembly fast enough for effective
autofocus? The assembly's movement back and forth along
the guide rod is powered by a USM (ultrasonic) motor.
Being a Canon
user, I am familiar with Canon's use of ultrasonic motors
in its lenses. They are noted for high torque and very precise
placement. The AX AF motor is low-rotation motor that requires
only 1.5 rotations of the motor shaft to move the assembly
from its front to back positions.
Still, the fact
is that an autofocus lens need only move a few lens elements
or maybe a couple of lens groups. These weigh far less and
have to travel much smaller distances than the heavy film
plane / mirror box / pentaprism assembly insider the AX.
No matter how well engineered, how can such a system really
operate quickly and precisely enough to be effective?
I was a doubter.
When I bought my AX, I thought that the autofocus would
only be useful in a few selected situations where little
fast action was necessary - scenic and still life photos.
After having used the AX, I am amazed that it is as fast
and accurate as it is. It is not as fast as my Canon EOS
1N, but it is surprisingly close.
The British photography
publication "Photon," compared the AX to a Minolta Dynax
9xi and found that the AX performed as well as the Minolta.
The review stated that the AX proved just as capable of
tracking action, catching suddenly framed images and selecting
the correct focus setting.
Special
Focus Operations and Limitations
The AX has special
advantages and limitations regarding autofocus. Both the
advantages and limitations are related to the 10mm of travel
through which the film plane moves back and forth.
For macro work,
the 10mm movement is like having a 10mm extension tube available
at the flick of a lever. This means that normal lenses can
operate like close focusing lenses and that wide angle lenses
can act like macro lenses. Even with the Carl Zeiss macro
lenses, there is an advantage because the 10mm extension
can result in even greater than normal magnification.
One limitation
is that the 10mm movement of the film plane limits the amount
of focusing travel available. The longer the lens, the more
travel is required to focus at close distances. So, for
example, the 10mm travel is used up before the 180mm lens
can focus to its normal closest focusing distance.
The solution
is one of those things that sounds much more complicated
on paper than in practice. To focus close with longer lenses,
it is necessary to rough focus first. This is not a big
deal (particularly to someone used to focusing manually),
but it is less convenient than other autofocus systems.
The second limitation
is a little more complex - the use of lenses with a floating
group. Lens designers developed the use of floating groups
to maintain sharpness at close focusing distances. As the
subject to camera distance decreases, and the lens is rotated
to a closer focusing setting, the floating group moves to
maintain sharpness. Remember that with the AX, the lens
is normally set to infinity, so that the floating group
does not have a chance to move to maintain sharpness at
closer focusing distances. So.... a lens with a floating
group must also be rough focused before allowing the AX's
AF to take over.
The viewfinder
contains a display that shows the position of the film plane
- whether it is in its base position or the degree of extension
along its 10mm travel. This is quite useful, so that the
photographer knows the amount of extension. This is helpful
for close focusing and with lenses having a floating group.
The viewfinder also has an in-focus indicator.
Autofocus control
is flexible. On the back right side of the camera there
is an AF button surrounded by a switch. The switch determines
whether the AF is active when the shutter button is partly
depressed or when the AF button is pushed. On the top right
side of the camera is a lever that determines AF mode -
either single shot, continuous tracking, manual focusing
or locked at the full 10mm extension for macro work. The
camera also uses an AF aid light for dark situations.
Operation
With the exception
of the autofocus system, the operation of the AX is modern
in function but classic in control layout. There is a shutter
speed dial for exposures from 4 seconds to 1/4000. The shutter
speed extends from 32 seconds to 1/6000 in Av and P modes.
Flash sych speed is 1/200. There is a mode level that selects
Av, P, M, Tv modes and is also used to select the ISO and
custom functions control.
Either 5mm spot
or center weighted TTL metering can be selected. There is
a separate exposure check button for those who prefer it
to partly depressing the shutter button. There is an AE
lock switch. With a custom function, AE lock may also be
achieved by partly depressing the shutter button or the
exposure check button. Exposure compensation is handled
by a dial on the top right side of the camera with +/- 2
EV compensation in 1/3 EV increments.
The viewfinder
is bright, relying on a large pentaprism. It shows 95% of
the actual field of view at .7x magnification. The viewfinder
shows lots of information including focus indication, film
plane position, aperture, shutter speed, exposure warning,
flash indicator, exposure compensation and exposure counter.
There is no mirror
lockup but there is multiple exposure capability. There
is also a depth of field preview button. The camera relies
on a single 2CR5 lithium battery. A data back is available
that can print information on the first two frames or in
between frames. There are also eight custom functions that
change operations like auto film rewind and leader in/out.
There is a self timer, dioptric adjustment with optional
lenses, inter-changeable focusing screens. Autobracketing
is either +/- .5 EV or +/- 1 EV.
For flash photography
there is 5 pin communication with the dedicated Contax flash
units. The Contax flash units are excellent -
particularly the TLA 360:
Conclusion
I have small
hands, so the AX feels like a big package to me. The most
particular difference is that the camera is thick from front
to back. After using it for a while I no longer notice this,
but the initial feel is different than most SLRs. The camera
balances and moves very well. The weight and size is not
an issue for one used to heavier SLRs. It does not seem
much different in these respects than an F4, 1N or RTS III.
It is a very comfortable camera to hold and the placement
of the controls is quite good. Contax has standardized the
general layout of most of the controls on its more recent
cameras. This is smart idea and is quite different than
most manufacturers whose cameras differ from each other
so dramatically in the layout of their controls (Compare
a Nikon N70 to an N90 or Canon 1N to Elan IIe).
The general capabilities
of the camera are similar to most modern SLRs. The advantage
is the design philosophy of its creators. Like all Contax
cameras, the AX is solid and straightforward. What it does
is similar to its contemporary competition from other companies.
How it does it is pure Contax.
Want
to find out More?
www.contaxcameras.com