Filters = glass. Extra glass = increased image degradation.
If that's true, why do lens designers use such complex designs, more than 10 elements is now quite common, yet the earliest cameras used single element lenses..........
Because they're forced to design lenses with a fixed flange-to-focal plane distance.
Even large format lenses which don't have a fixed flange distance use multiple elements. Extra elements are used to reduce spherical aberration, coma, chromatic aberration... The need for correction often increases dramatically when fast glass is wanted.
There are good reasons why lens design evolved to give the 'Cooke Triplet', 'Double Gauss', 'Biogon', 'Ultron' etc. which have nothing to do with the registration.
I never said LF glass has single elements. I said LF glass has FEWER elements because they don't have a fixed flang-to-plane distance.
If the FFL of a SLR/DSLR camera is, say 45mm, how does a designer make a lens with a focal length shorter than 45mm? By design, it would have to be inside the camera itself, interfering with the mirror. So they
add glass to force the back of the lens back out beyond 45mm in front of the focal plane.