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Nikkor 300mm 1:4.5 Aperture Stop Down Repair

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Cholentpot

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Oct 26, 2015
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35mm
Hi,

I was given a very nice example of a Nikkor 300mm. Only issue is the aperture won't close down. On inspection the reason was obvious. The pin is missing.

Is this a simple fix? Is there a way I can just close it down to something like f/8 and leave it there? 4.5 is nice but it's kind of useless for me on such a long lens.

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The aperture lever appears to be missing. Remove the 5 screws, lift the mount ring off, take another picture of the rear of the lens and post it.

I can't get the screws out for fear of stripping it. Is there a specific screwdriver I should be using? The glasses repair one can't seem to grip it well enough.
 
The screw heads look buggered, so this lens may have been used for parts already. This might be a good lens on which to practice.
 
I tried to remove the screws on mine and only got 1 to come out and its threads were coated with threadlocker.

I'll give it a go

The screw heads look buggered, so this lens may have been used for parts already. This might be a good lens on which to practice.

If I can't get 'em out this will just be a wide open 300mm lens. Can't really think of what it'll be useful for though...
 
Long tele lenses are often useful wide open for getting as fast a shutter speed as possible, and for background blur. A lot of wildlife photos are typically taken at a wide aperture. I use a 300/4.5 occasionally for a technical astro photography application (with d***tal, sorry) and use it wide open for that of course.

The rear screws on Nikon lenses are typically quite tight and you usually need to dissolve thread locker; someone who didn't dissolve the threadlocker probably damaged the screw heads.
 
Long tele lenses are often useful wide open for getting as fast a shutter speed as possible, and for background blur. A lot of wildlife photos are typically taken at a wide aperture. I use a 300/4.5 occasionally for a technical astro photography application (with d***tal, sorry) and use it wide open for that of course.

The rear screws on Nikon lenses are typically quite tight and you usually need to dissolve thread locker; someone who didn't dissolve the threadlocker probably damaged the screw heads.

I don't do much birding, but I can always try. The screws aren't as bad as they look. I'll try applying some nasty stuff to them and see what happens.
 
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