Hello! All,
I am trying to buy the right lens for my adapter that I just bought for my DVX100A. I saw this lens on KEH.COM and Ebay as well, it does say "Auto" on the front of the lens, but the description says "Manual." Would I be able to use this lens with my adapter? This is the url for the lens in question:
http://cgi.ebay.com/Nikon-Nikkor-S-5...item1c1c1a235b
Thank you in advance DVX gurus!
Thread: Nikon lens help
Results 1 to 6 of 6
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- Texas
- Posts
- 339
07-06-2011 05:56 PM
Rene Hinojosa
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2010
- Location
- Halmstad, Sweden
- Posts
- 418
07-07-2011 12:10 AM
Yes you will be able to use it. Just make sure that the lens is fully manuall (the focus and F stop). Since a 35mm adapter don't have any ability to adjust your lens as a DSLR camera has, you simply have to do it all by hand (as it always has been done in the film camera world). Redrock has a thing called live lens that lets you use Canon lenses with "automatic" apertures on their adapter.
Any older Nikon lens like the one you want to buy will work, just look for the aperture ring and the focus ring
-
07-07-2011 02:10 AM
That reference to "Auto" on the front of the lens is in regards to the old auto exposure indexing function that the Nikon film cameras had at the time. The lens is NOT what is called an "AI" lens though, which is evident by the solid blades on the exposure indexing notch, which is on the aperture ring.
That is a great lens, and that is a good price. I have one I use on a Canon HD-DSLR and a Sony FS100. I love it. It is very hard to go wrong with manual Nikkor lenses.
EDIT: BTW, with that serial number, 1033401, it looks like that lens was made about 1972.
http://www.photosynthesis.co.nz/niko...es.html#50fastLast edited by David G. Smith; 07-07-2011 at 02:20 AM.
"The enemy of art is the absence of limitations"
-Orson Wells.
"To me the great hope is... people that normally wouldn't be making movies will make them and suddenly some little fat girl in Ohio will be the new Mozart and will make a beautiful film using her father's camera-corder and the "Professionalism" of movie making will be destroyed forever and it will finally become an art form."
-Francis Ford Coppola.
-
Senior Member
- Join Date
- May 2005
- Location
- Texas
- Posts
- 339
07-07-2011 05:55 AM
Thank you very much gentleman, I can now make my choice with confidence. I wasn't sure at first but you guys provided the right info so things are much clearer now. Thanks again!
Rene Hinojosa
-
12-07-2011 02:39 PM
Yes, you could use any Pre-AI (like the lens you bought), AI, and AIS lenses. No Digital lenses since the blades stay closed until you give it a power source to the lens. Try to buy fastest lens you can afford. My signature will tell you what I have to give you a reference point.
Bolex Rex-4 Ultra-16mm, Canon XHA1, Nebtek/Marshall V-R70P-HDA w/Canon plate, SGpro r3, SGFlipmodule, SGpro FF w/generic speedcrank, RR Mattebox, Cartoni Focus with Gitzo Legs, Nikkor 16mm f2.8, 24mm f2.8, 28mm f2.8, 35mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 85mm f1.4, 105mm f1.8, 135mm f2.0, 300mm f4.0, 70-210 f4-5.6D.
MacPro, Macbook Pro 13, Adobe Creative Suite CS5.5 Production Premium, Final Cut Studio 3, Digi 003 Factory, Logic Studio Pro, Pro Tools 9, Presonus Lightpipe, Presonus Digimax FS. KRK V6 and NS10's
-
01-02-2012 10:06 PM
You can also use many of the dozens of AF lenses made. Anything with an aperture ring will work. The AF lenses have some legendary designs; the focus feel is less damped than manual lenses, but there are some amazing lenses in the AF and AF-D designations, many quite affordable.




Nikon lens help

