Apparently,Hasselblad "V" s\Series lenses can be used as enlarging lenses.
Has anyone here done this and if so, what were your likes or dislikes about the matter?
Eli
I've not used hassie lenses to enlarge, but I've used taking lenses to enlarge, when starting LF printing, in particular a Sironar N LF lens in a DIY "CAMBO-Larger".
A mint Nikkor EL 80 costs 70€, adapter for the taking lens to fit in the enlarger may cost more, or it would be time consuming DIY.
Taking lenses had been used for enlarging for decades before specialized enlarging lenses were popular.
It the past it was recommended that (in general) the same lens used for the particular shot was also used for enlarging, as distortion and fall-off was to be mostly cancelled when the rays do the path back from the film to the other side of the glass...
The graflarger illuminator-carrier was intended to use the camera as an enlarger, suposedly using the taking lens.
In modern times enlarger lenses had been quite specialized to shine in the enlarging work, optimized for close work, delivering an extra flat focus plane, and cancelling distortion. A taking lens used for enlarging may not be well corrected for such a close work, if it is not a macro lens. As you stop the taking lens you will see less any curvature flaw in the focus "plane", but probably an enlarger lens is able to work with a larger aperture to deliver better performance, still this would be harder to notice if the taking lens is used optimally and is a bit long for the format.
When enlarging the most critical is nailing focus, ensuring film flatness and alignment, then selecting the optimal focal and aperture... using a bit longer focal (if having the room) than usual allows to work more with the center of the image circle so some performance issues can be avoided.
Using a taking lens for enlarging ? why not ? But one has to be prepared to make the adapter and to find the way to make an optimal job, sure that using a bit "longer than usual" focal will help.