And don't forget the sinking American dollar. Our international competitors for Ebay products can afford to jack the bids up due to the rise of the Euro (for example) against the dollar.
Yea I realize it might just be a wall hanger, it is the 300 f3.2 but I have wanted one of these for thirty years for no real logical reason other than I first found out about them when I was taking my first photo classes in a vo-tech.Um, Bobby, your expenses have just begun. Unless, that is, the lens has a tripod adapter. They were sold without, can't be used without. My former 500/5.6 TA II wasn't a true telephoto lens, it was a long focus lens. Achromatic doublet way out in front, and that was it.
Bobby, what Cambridge offers and what Cambridge delivers are often very different. I've seen them take money for goods they couldn't/wouldn't deliver and refuse to refund it. And I've seen them list rare and valuable lenses, e.g., 300/2 Nikkor, in their ads in the back pages at prices that were a good ten years out of date. Be very cautious when dealing with Cambridge.
When I bought my 500/5.6 it was a basket case and priced accordingly. Century returned it to as-new condition and sold me a mount adapter too. I'd expect that the adapters are still available even though Schneider now owns Century. If not, try Jesse Chambless, if he's still alive and in business (google chambless cine equipment).
More power to you if you can shoot a 300 hand-held. I can't, and I have a 300/5.6 TA in C-mount.
My $140 dollar, with shipping, Athenar lens arrived, finally (It seems I picked up so many packages, they forgot to give me this one.)I just won a Tele-Athenar II by outbidding my competitor by 27 cents, and that was how far I was from my absolute top.
I paid 35.50 more then I really wanted to but, sometimes you just gotta go for it.
Bobby
Bobby, I'll bet the lens is in Century mount. Same concept as T-mount but with longer back focus. Back when, I bought a Century-to-T-mount adapter from Century, used that to hang mine in front of (not from) a Nikon. They should still have 'em.My $140 dollar, with shipping, Athenar lens arrived, finally (It seems I picked up so many packages, they forgot to give me this one.)
Everything looks and feels good.
The C-mount comes right off, as does the mount it is screwed to.
It is a lot smaller in general size than I had always imagined, but that is not a bad thing. By my standard not heavy.
Compared to my Meyer Gorlitz 300 f4.5, it is light, but that does have a tripod mount.
I will call Century and see what mounts they still have, if it can take a standard T-mount there are a number of those in odd makes now on the internet for low prices.
Bobby
I received an notice I had just been out bid and my 377 had been topped by 382 with 22 minutes left to go.
I thought nope I done, I do not need a collectors item.
Well a couple of minute later I thought well I think I will have a look-see.
The 382 bid was listed nowhere, even in past bids, and with minutes to go it was up to 739 bucks.
I just wonder whey the 382 was not shown, nor was the person who had bid that amount.
Makes sense and that is how I figured it worked BUT then name or code name assc. with 382 disappeared also.I'm not positive, but what probably happened was this (making up names and random other bids):
- Starting price: $100
- Fred: Bids $150; current price $100
- You: Bid $377; current price $101 (Fred's $100 plus $1 increment)
- Sally: Bid $734; current price $382 (Your $377 plus $5 increment)
- Dale: Bid $800; current price $739 (Sally's $734 plus $5 increment)
- Auction ends: Dale wins at $739
In this scenario, the summary wouldn't show a $382 price because nobody bid that amount as a maximum bid. The $382 price was just your bid plus the increment (which I'm supposing was $5 at that level, although I don't recall the precise eBay bid increment values and their associated bid levels). I'm not positive, but I believe the bid summary screen shows losing bidders' top bids; only the current high bid is shown, not the high bids through the whole sequence. If you don't understand this, I suggest you read up on eBay's proxy bidding system. This seems to confuse a lot of people, but once you understand it it's not that hard a concept to grasp.
Makes sense and that is how I figured it worked BUT then name or code name assc. with 382 disappeared also.
I watch names, codes, closely.
I will have to agree with this one hundred percent, I was just browsing through some of the high priced EOS items, and every once in awhile some one gets one for dirt cheap prices.This leads to my rule of thumb for ebay purchases: Low ball your bids and plan on losing most of the bids. If you are winning a large percentage of your bids (say more than 20% at the highest) you are probably paying too much.
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