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My Nikon PB-4 Journey

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grant.goodes

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Joined
Mar 16, 2026
Messages
6
Location
Ottawa, Canada
Format
35mm
I have always been interested in macro-photography, and after being gifted a Nikon model II bellows and having a bit of fun that and my 105/2.5, I sought out the legendary PB-4 swing/shift bellows and traded my 105/2.5 in for a Micro-Nikkor 105/2.8. For many years, this remained my setup for mostly field-photography (mushrooms being a particular "focus"), but I was never very happy with the results I got with the Micro-Nikkor, especially if I tried any movements. I think part of the problem with the 105/2.8 (aside from being designed to only cover 35mm) is its advanced CRC design, which gives you a kind of "dead zone" when you use more extension, since when shooting from 1:2 to 1:1, the CRC is effectively expecting you to be shooting at longer distances and not close-range.

To address coverage issue, I eventually bought a cheap medium-format lens (Wollensak 138/4.5 Graphic Raptar) to try out, and though this gave more coverage for the PB-4's movements (less vignetting), it was frankly a pretty crappy lens.

I recently got my dream macro lens, the large-format Nikkor 120/5.6 AM-ED (after hunting for MANY years for a sub $500 example), and the results are truly eye-opening. The 120/5.6 AM-ED is very compact mounted on the PB-4, and even allows movements at infinity focus. It takes 52mm filters which is very convenient for a Nikon shooter. It does seem susceptible to flare, but I took some advice from Bjørn Rørslett's old reviews of the lens and bought an HN-3 screw-in shade for it (designed for the 35mm lenses) which helps with the flare but still allows for movements without vignetting.

When deciding on the 120/5.6 AM-ED, I explored the (large) universe of macro-optimized Nikkors, ranging from the APO EL-Nikkors, Printing-Nikkors, short-mount Bellows-Nikkors, to industrial/process lenses generally. As great as all these other lenses sounded, I just couldn't justify their expense (the APO EL-Nikkor 105/5.6 being a particularly bad example of collectors driving up the prices), or else their rarity made them impossible to find. I did recently trip over a listing for a mint condition 105/4 Bellows-Nikkor for sale at $150, so that is on its way to me (to become the 8th 105mm Nikkor in my collection). I realize that the optical design of the short-mount 105/4 is the same as the later Micro-Nikkor 105/4 AiS (with the addition of modern coatings), but I'm curious to see if the coverage is better than my 105/2.8. I guess I will find out shortly, but I'd be interested to hear if any PB-4 users out there have any comments on the characteristics of the Bellows-Nikkors.
 
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Thanks for sharing. I'd love to see some photos made with the setup.

Have you tried any enlarging lenses with the bellows?
 
I'll try to get some photos up, but we're still in Massive Snow mode here in the Great White North, so no mushrooms to shoot right now!

To your question: Before I found the 120/5.6 AM-ED, I bought a nice copy of the Schneider Kreuznach 135/5.6 Componon-S enlarging lens. The one I found is a somewhat older version of the lens, and there are updated designs, but they cost quite a bit more. I used this 135mm Enlarging Lens Test to help me choose what to hunt for (I wanted 120-135mm focal-length to allow infinity focus w. movements on my PB-4). Ultimately, the choice was made by finding the Componon-S at $100, far below the prices I found of the other well-reviewed lenses.

The Componon-S is a great performer, very compact, and it is super-easy to adapt to F-mount as it has an M42x1 thread (ie. T2 mount). It kicks my old Wollensak to the curb! However, I suspect it won't get much use now that I have the Nikkor. I paid 4x more for the 120/5.6 AM-ED, but it was totally worth it: (a) it's a very sexy looking Nikkor that I had been lusting over for years, and (b) it _does_ perform better IMO.
 
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I have a PB 4 with the 105 bellows Nikkor. The setup will fit on my D850. I played with it a bit, but the 105 VRII micro nikkor calls me when I shoot in close. So many fun things to play with 👍
 
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