Hasselblad · 50mm f/4 · Hasselblad V

Hasselblad / Zeiss Distagon CF FLE 50mm f/4

Medium format Prime f/4 Discontinued landscape · architecture · clinical · high-contrast · leaf-shutter · value-buy

Put this next to the older non-FLE 50mm Distagon and shoot a brick wall at three feet. The corners on the old lens go soft and the field curves away from you; the FLE holds them flat. That is the entire reason this version exists. FLE stands for Floating Lens Element, a group that moves independently as you focus close, and on a wide retrofocus design for 6x6 it is the difference between a lens that is fine at infinity and one that is honest across the whole range.

It is a Distagon, which on the V system means retrofocus, because Zeiss had to clear the giant reflex mirror swinging in front of a 50mm on a 56mm-square frame. Stopped to f/8 or f/11 it is razor flat to the corners, the kind of file you can crop into and still trust. Wide at f/4 the center is already strong and the extreme corners trail a little, which on a landscape lens almost nobody notices because you are at f/16 anyway. Color is the cool, slightly clinical Zeiss signature of the era. Contrast is high and skies render with real separation, no muddy compression in the upper zones.

This is a landscape and architecture lens first. The 50mm on 6x6 gives you roughly a 28mm full-frame angle of view without the drama of the 40mm, so you get sweep without the bulging perspective. Studio and product shooters reach for it when they need a wide that stays geometrically clean. Documentary and environmental portrait people use it too, and the leaf shutter is the quieter reason: this Prontor CF leaf shutter syncs flash at every speed up to 1/500, so you can drop ambient outdoors and kill the sun without a high-speed-sync workaround. If you are balancing flash against a bright sky, meter the ambient in Zone Light Meter, then trust that 1/500 sync to clip the background where you want it.

The honest weakness is the front end. That 60mm bayonet filter mount is a closed Hasselblad ecosystem, and the lens flares if you let raking light hit the big front element without the dedicated shade. Get a stray sun into the frame and you will see veiling haze drop the contrast across the whole image. Hood it religiously. The other catch is mundane: it is a heavy, dense piece of glass on an already heavy body, and handholding a 50mm Distagon at slow leaf-shutter speeds is not the same as a 35mm rangefinder wide.

Today it sits in the affordable-Zeiss bracket. Clean CF FLE copies trade for a fraction of what the later CFi and CFE versions command, and people cross-shop it against those newer barrels mostly for the updated ergonomics and the larger B70 filter mount, not the optics, which are essentially the same formula. It is already a T* multicoated lens, like every CF, so you are not giving up coatings by buying the older barrel. The thing to verify before buying is the floating element helicoid: if the FLE ring is stiff or the grease has migrated, that correction stops doing its job and you have paid extra for a feature that no longer works. Find a well-kept copy and it is hard to spend this little for this much wide-angle quality on the V system.

How the app handles this lens

  • Metering: Max aperture f/4. Meter wide open in dim light, then the app holds the reading while you stop down to your taking aperture.
  • Leaf shutter: The shutter sits in the lens, so it syncs flash at every speed instead of topping out at a body X-sync. The app's shutter ladder covers the full leaf range.
  • Filters: Takes 60mm filters. Dial an ND or polariser factor into the app and the metered exposure shifts to match.

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