Donald Qualls
Subscriber
My chiropractor remembered me when his family was clearing out stuff that had belonged to his uncle (who had worked as a private investigator), and gave me a Quantaray 75-200 f/4.5-5.6 zoom. It's a Nikon mount and latches onto my Nikkormat FT2, but it lacks the "rabbit ears" that tell the camera what the aperture is set for while metering with a wide open aperture. The lens is 100% manual and has no electrical contacts on the mount.
I've heard/read that the "rabbit ears" can be added to (AI? AIS?) lenses made for several years after Nikon and compatibles quit putting them on new lenses, to make them compatible with the older cameras like the FT2; this requires drilling and tapping two small holes in the aperture ring, presumably at just the right place. I don't have the tools to do this job myself, and I'm not sure how good this lens is (i.e. is it worth paying someone to mount the linkage?). Any opinions? Obviously, I could use it in stop-down metering mode, but one of the things I like most about my FT2 is not having to remember to hit the "preview" to meter (I'm a long time M42 user, and the preview button has been part of my 35 mm life).
I've heard/read that the "rabbit ears" can be added to (AI? AIS?) lenses made for several years after Nikon and compatibles quit putting them on new lenses, to make them compatible with the older cameras like the FT2; this requires drilling and tapping two small holes in the aperture ring, presumably at just the right place. I don't have the tools to do this job myself, and I'm not sure how good this lens is (i.e. is it worth paying someone to mount the linkage?). Any opinions? Obviously, I could use it in stop-down metering mode, but one of the things I like most about my FT2 is not having to remember to hit the "preview" to meter (I'm a long time M42 user, and the preview button has been part of my 35 mm life).