Steve Hamley
Member
Folks,
'm in a bit of a puzzle here trying to identify a lens. There are two jpegs attached of this unusual beast. It's a Bausch and Lomb f:4.5 Tessar marked "296.1mm E.F. Tessar f:4.5" with the usual Bausch and Lomb Rochester marking and a serial of 3233702. It is NOT marked Ic. It's in a large and heavy (really heavy) helical focusing mount, calibrated from 8 feet to infinity with distance markings at 8, 15, 25, 50, 100 and infinity. Unlike most Tessars, it stops down to f:45. The helical mount has about 49mm of extension.
I've plowed through the B&L literature on Seth Broder's site, and can't find anything listing such a precise focal length or the helical mount it is in. It seems obvious that it was attached to a fixed or non-focusing "something". If it's a projector lens, why the precise FL and the long distance scales? If it's an aerial lens, why the short distance scales?
Now why get so interested in an old uncoated Tessar? Well, other than curiosity, when compared to a 30cm f:4.5 coated Heliar, it has a far better transition to out-of-focus and shallower DOF than the Heliar, which would seem to violate the laws of optics given the difference in FL of 4mm or so. That would also possibly indicate the B&L was optimized for a different use than a standard view camera taking lens. It is quite sharp too, but just seems to have a smaller DOF which gives a nice 3D look.
So, any idea what this thing is?
Thanks,
Steve
'm in a bit of a puzzle here trying to identify a lens. There are two jpegs attached of this unusual beast. It's a Bausch and Lomb f:4.5 Tessar marked "296.1mm E.F. Tessar f:4.5" with the usual Bausch and Lomb Rochester marking and a serial of 3233702. It is NOT marked Ic. It's in a large and heavy (really heavy) helical focusing mount, calibrated from 8 feet to infinity with distance markings at 8, 15, 25, 50, 100 and infinity. Unlike most Tessars, it stops down to f:45. The helical mount has about 49mm of extension.
I've plowed through the B&L literature on Seth Broder's site, and can't find anything listing such a precise focal length or the helical mount it is in. It seems obvious that it was attached to a fixed or non-focusing "something". If it's a projector lens, why the precise FL and the long distance scales? If it's an aerial lens, why the short distance scales?
Now why get so interested in an old uncoated Tessar? Well, other than curiosity, when compared to a 30cm f:4.5 coated Heliar, it has a far better transition to out-of-focus and shallower DOF than the Heliar, which would seem to violate the laws of optics given the difference in FL of 4mm or so. That would also possibly indicate the B&L was optimized for a different use than a standard view camera taking lens. It is quite sharp too, but just seems to have a smaller DOF which gives a nice 3D look.
So, any idea what this thing is?
Thanks,
Steve