goros
Member
If I remember correctly, Nikon cameras register distance is the shortest amongst the major modern SLR cameras (Canon, Nikon, Pentax, Olympus), so it is very difficult that any F mount lens could be adapted to other mount.
If I remember correctly, Nikon cameras register distance is the shortest amongst the major modern SLR cameras (Canon, Nikon, Pentax, Olympus), so it is very difficult that any F mount lens could be adapted to other mount.
If I remember correctly, Nikon cameras register distance is the shortest amongst the major modern SLR cameras (Canon, Nikon, Pentax, Olympus), so it is very difficult that any F mount lens could be adapted to other mount.
Except they won't convert the lenses (they will for the Cine Compact Primes only, but that's different)- the barrels aren't exactly the same on the ZE and ZF (for one, the ZE doesn't have an aperture ring)- easier to buy and sell if you change systemsBut Zeiss put mounts onto the lens to fit a nikon or canon etc. If you change the mount already on the lens to a canon mount then it should work fine. i.e. we're not thinking of adding an adapter, or at least I'm not.
I credit the lens manufacturers as being smart enough to design the lens with a long enough back focus to be able to use the exact same lens with different factory fitted mounts to fit the major camera mounts. They don't redesign the lens for each camera make as far as I'm aware, they just design a mount for each camera. The lens to film distance remains constant for all makes of camera for that particular lens. There may be exceptions to the rule but as a manufacturer you are going to save yourself a lot of money by doing it that way.
So it becomes a conversion job to change from nikon to canon mount or visa versa and not an adapter job.
Except they won't convert the lenses (they will for the Cine Compact Primes only, but that's different)- the barrels aren't exactly the same on the ZE and ZF (for one, the ZE doesn't have an aperture ring)- easier to buy and sell if you change systems
I'm aware of that Richard but "cheap" isn't the only criteria it doesn't address the point of service availability, and replacing one faulty body with another of unknown history is just kicking the can down the road if you need a reliable camera that you can come back from trips with pictures with, not excuses .There are loads of working Contax SLR bodies and Yashica bodies out there, very cheap.
I'm aware of that Richard but "cheap" isn't the only criteria it doesn't address the point of service availability, and replacing one faulty body with another of unknown history is just kicking the can down the road if you need a reliable camera that you can come back from trips with pictures with, not excuses .
People can do what they like with their own money , but I personally wouldn't.So you putting forward the argument that no one should buy an old camera which parts aren't readily available for. And that is even if you can buy a spare body or two.
The manufacturers will love you for that.
I continue to own and use every Contax and Yashica camera with the C/Y mount and have been using them with Zeiss and some Yashica, Tamron SP and Tokina AT-X lenses ever since first buying an RTS back in the 1970s.
The FR series cameras are physically heavier but much more cheaply made than the FX-3 and similar models. The cheap plastic materials used in the winding mechanism are the problem.
I cannot believe this to be true since the review in Sept '77 Pop Photo stripped the FR down to the component parts and they indicated that materials used (external and internal) were good. They further state, "The shutter/mirror box module would read like a carbon copy of the RTS, as would descriptions of the self-timer, viewfinder system and wind mechanism." I don't have the stripdown reviews of either the FX-2 and FX-3 but it would be interesting to know if they also stripped them down to component parts and identify the changes if anyone has them. Specs indicate that the FX-2 was reduced in size to practically that of the Pentax MX but lighter.
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Specs indicate that the FX-2 was reduced in size to practically that of the Pentax MX but lighter.
- FR 142.5 X 87 X 50, 690g
- FX-2 144.5 X 94 X 51, 690g
- FX-3 135 X 84.5 X 50, 445g
- MX 135.5 X 82.5 X 49.5, 495g
It seems strange to me, too. I have an FR and the only endemic problem I'm aware of is frame counter failure. A contemporary report suggested the FR would be at least as reliable as the original RTS if not more so. My FR does have a loud, somewhat resonant shutter but I like the camera, especially the meter slide switch which stays on while ever the film advance lever is off set. Solid, it certainly is.
That's a much larger lens as well as very expensive; not really equivalent. F/2.8 often doesn't cut it for me.
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