If youโ€™ve spent any time researching the Helios 44-2, youโ€™ve probably heard people say things like โ€œoily aperture blades ruin contrastโ€ or โ€œthis factory logo makes bad copies.โ€โ€จ

Itโ€™s repeated so often online that it starts to feel like fact.

But after servicing hundreds of these lenses over the years โ€” from every factory logo, every era, even the โ€œpremiumโ€ early silver versions โ€” the pattern I kept seeing didnโ€™t match what the internet kept saying. So instead of guessing, I decided to test everything properly and show the results in the most honest way possible.

This video covers three things filmmakers always worry about:

  1. Why oily aperture blades actually happen
  2. Whether oily blades affect image quality wide openโ€จ
  3. Whether stopping down actually reduces contrastโ€จ

What I learned confirmed something Iโ€™ve felt for years shooting with these lenses:โ€จthe blades are cosmetic. The optics and service history are what actually shape the image.


If youโ€™re a filmmaker who loves character lenses, this video might help you see past all the myths and internet noise, and focus on what actually matters when choosing a Helios 44-2.

And if you want a properly serviced, cinemodded copy โ€” one thatโ€™s been rebuilt, cleaned, re-greased, optically checked, and ready for filmmaking โ€” you can find my latest builds here.


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