Were there any Cooke Triplet's made for either M or LTM cameras? Not Tessar's, just Cooke Triplet's. For that matter any made for Nikon F mount as well??
The famous Elmar 90mm triplet better than it's 4 element brothers, the MS-Optical Perar (M), Leica Televid is a triplet, 135mm Triotar for LTM and probably many more
Maybe look for a Meyer Trioplan or a Domiplan they were sold in various mounts, if you can't find Leica screw thread then M42 should be adapable to Nikon F.
The problem is most triplets weren't sold for SLR use and often come in cheaper Pronto/Prontor/Vario shutters for folding cameras 35mm and 120, they are almost all cell focussing.
MS Optical are the people to talk to. They have a triplet 35mm collapsible lens, amongst others, and while having the quirks of being 'hand made', they still are top quality lenses.
By the time the SLR became widely popular in the 1960s, the industry had long since moved on from the triplet.
And most SLR buyers wanted a high-quality optic, not a bargain-bin lens.
I think your best bet would be to find a pre-1950s viewfinder/rangefinder camera with a triplet. Or as others have suggested, adapt an older lens to an SLR mount.
Hello,
the Meyer Domiplan 1:2,8/50 mm was often sold as the cheapest lens with DDR cameras. I think it cannot be adapted to Nikon F because the register of Nikon is longer. The triplet is ideally suited for the cheap front-lens focussing and this was nearly always the case with fix built in lenses (like Agfa Optima).
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.