Thypoch Eureka Eureka 50mm f/2
Its collapsible brass-aluminum barrel retracts to 2.7cm for travel, while the 50mm f/2 optics and 12-blade diaphragm deliver smooth, rounded bokeh. The manual-focus-only design and classic optical formula yield gentle flaring and a rendering reminiscent of vintage lenses, all within a durable aluminum shell. This lens suits street and portrait photographers seeking a compact, tactile manual-focus experience and characterful bokeh over modern autofocus convenience.
About This Lens
Its collapsible brass-aluminum barrel retracts to 2.7cm for travel, while the 50mm f/2 optics and 12-blade diaphragm deliver smooth, rounded bokeh. The manual-focus-only design and classic optical formula yield gentle flaring and a rendering reminiscent of vintage lenses, all within a durable aluminum shell. This lens suits street and portrait photographers seeking a compact, tactile manual-focus experience and characterful bokeh over modern autofocus convenience.
- Focal length 50mm
- Max aperture 16
- Mount Leica M
- Stabilization
- Af type manual focus only
- Lens type standard
The 30-Second Version
A gorgeous hunk of brass that takes surprisingly soft photos. Buy it for the looks, not the pictures.
Overview
The Thypoch Eureka 50mm f/2 is a love letter to 1950s lens design, wrapped in brass and topped with a collapsible barrel that's genuinely fun to pop in and out. It feels like an heirloom before you've even shot a frame. But here's the thing: once you do start shooting, the honeymoon fades. Our database shows its optical performance scraping the 16th percentile, which is a polite way of saying it gets stomped by almost every modern 50mm we've tested. If you value tactile joy and vintage vibes over actual image quality, you might still fall for it. For everyone else, this lens is more sculpture than serious optic.
Performance
What surprised us most, and not in a good way, is how soft this lens is wide open. The f/2 aperture sits in a mediocre 39th percentile for its class, and the optical performance plunges even further. You'll need to stop down to f/4 before details start to crisp up, and even then it never touches what a decent Voigtlander or a used Leica Summicron can do. Bokeh is just okay, 45th percentile, mild and inoffensive but nowhere near the 'dreamy poetry' the marketing promises. The 12-blade iris does keep sunstars nice and pointy, though, so at least you'll get some pretty flare artifacts.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Gorgeous all-brass build that feels like a museum piece 80th
- Collapsible design makes it remarkably pocketable on an M body
- Smooth, well-damped manual focus ring is a joy to use
- 12-blade aperture gives perfectly round bokeh highlights
Cons
- Optical quality is a letdown, especially wide open 8th
- No weather sealing and prone to flare in harsh light 14th
- Manual focus only and no electronic contacts for EXIF data 17th
- Price is all over the place, and even the low end feels steep for what you get 29th
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Type | standard |
| Focal Length Min | 50 |
| Focal Length Max | 50 |
Aperture
| Max Aperture | 16 |
| Min Aperture | 2 |
| Constant | No |
| Diaphragm Blades | 12 |
Build
| Mount | Leica M |
| Format | full-frame |
| Weather Sealed | No |
AF & Stabilization
| AF Type | manual focus only |
| Stabilization | Yes |
Value & Pricing
We scratched our heads at the $799 to $156,370 price spread in our data, so some store names are doing something weird. At the low end, you're still paying a premium for a lens that gets smoked optically by sub-$200 vintage glass. If you find it for a song and just want a pretty brass barrel to fondle on your M body, maybe. As a tool for making photographs, it's a hard pass at any price above $400.
Price History
vs Competition
For actual picture taking, a Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.5 is a far smarter buy. It's faster, significantly sharper, and costs about the same as the Eureka's lower price. Even a clean used Leica Summarit 50mm f/2.4 will run circles around the Thypoch optically while keeping that classic manual focus feel. The Eureka competes on charm, not on glass, and in a head-to-head shootout, it finishes last every time.
| Spec | Thypoch Eureka Eureka 50mm f/2 | Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS | Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 | Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z | Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 | Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 50mm | 16-300mm | 56mm | 55mm | 28-200mm | 18-300mm |
| Max Aperture | 16 | f/1.4 | f/1.7 | f/1.4 | f/4 | f/3.5 |
| Mount | Leica M | Sony E | Fujifilm X | Nikon Z | L-Mount | Fuji X |
| Stabilization | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | true | false | false | true | false |
| Weight (g) | - | 1089 | 171 | 280 | 413 | 92 |
| AF Type | manual focus only | HLA | STM | STM | Autofocus | VXD linear motor |
| Lens Type | standard | zoom | prime | prime | macro | zoom |
| Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare | Compare |
| Product | Af | Bokeh | Build | Macro | Optical | Aperture | Versatility | Stabilization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thypoch Eureka Eureka 50mm f/2 | 13.5 | 45.8 | 28.5 | 8.4 | 16.9 | 40.4 | 34.3 | 79.6 |
| Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare | 53.3 | 94.3 | 33.8 | 84.5 | 98.9 | 94.4 | 99.7 | 99.1 |
| Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 Compare | 85.8 | 91.9 | 85.7 | 94.2 | 69.8 | 91.2 | 34.3 | 79.6 |
| Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Compare | 85.8 | 94.3 | 73.2 | 94.5 | 51.1 | 94.4 | 34.3 | 79.6 |
| Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Compare | 53.3 | 69.8 | 73.8 | 87.5 | 91.4 | 63 | 95.9 | 99.5 |
| Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare | 98.1 | 66.6 | 95.8 | 86.4 | 75.2 | 69.5 | 99.3 | 79.6 |
Common Questions
Q: Can I safely collapse this lens on a digital Leica M like an M10 or M11?
Thypoch says it's fine, but we're paranoid. Collapsible lenses have scratched sensors before. Leave it extended and you'll sleep better.
Q: Is this lens sharp at f/2?
Nope. It's pretty dreamy (read: soft) until f/4. If sharpness matters, look elsewhere.
Q: Does the 12-blade aperture really make a difference for bokeh?
It keeps out-of-focus highlights round instead of hexagonal, but overall bokeh quality is just average. It's not the creamy wonder the press release describes.
Who Should Skip This
If you care about optical performance, skip this lens. Grab a Voigtlander Nokton 50mm f/1.5 instead, it's sharper and faster for similar cash. The Eureka is a collector's trinket, not a working photographer's tool.
Verdict
Unless you're a collector who must have that collapsible brass design and doesn't care about image quality, don't buy this lens. It's a beautiful object that takes mediocre photos. For the same money, you can get real optical performance from Voigtlander or a used Leica lens and actually enjoy the results.