MTGseattle
Subscriber
The background: I recently got myself a Mamiya 6mf again after about a 12-year gap since I sold my last one. I did not source the Mamiya dedicated hoods for both lenses, so I bought a silly collapsible rubber one. I went with the first one on the shelf that had the required thread diameter. It causes a fair bit of vignetting on the G 50mm lens. Is there a way to calculate the distance off of the front of the lens barrel where vignetting will occur? My thought is to take a known quantity (some B&W skylight 1A) and just keep stacking them until I get vignetting. The problem here is 1. having to buy a bunch of 1A filters, 2. the delay in shooting and processing to get the results.
To do the proper math, would I need the very specific measurements from Mamiya regarding the lens if available? Another known quantity is obviously the proper hood designed for the lens which I could measure with a caliper and then have a distance within which no vignetting occurs.
The reason I am even asking this is I would like to try some techniques that would require my Lee filters.
https://lens-db.com/mamiya-g-50mm-f4-l-1989/ If the link works, it should be an image of 8 elements in 5 groups lens cell configuration. 76.4 degree stated angle of view.
Ultimately, if I have to "waste" another roll of film or 2 figuring this out, that's fine as I've already "wasted" 3 rolls just goofing up having been away from film for a while.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
-MG
To do the proper math, would I need the very specific measurements from Mamiya regarding the lens if available? Another known quantity is obviously the proper hood designed for the lens which I could measure with a caliper and then have a distance within which no vignetting occurs.
The reason I am even asking this is I would like to try some techniques that would require my Lee filters.
https://lens-db.com/mamiya-g-50mm-f4-l-1989/ If the link works, it should be an image of 8 elements in 5 groups lens cell configuration. 76.4 degree stated angle of view.
Ultimately, if I have to "waste" another roll of film or 2 figuring this out, that's fine as I've already "wasted" 3 rolls just goofing up having been away from film for a while.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
-MG