In its day, the Nikkor 180mm/2.8 ED lens was a perfect marriage for any pro photographer shooting colour transparency film. Any magazine work required colour separations for four colour printing. Having really well focused film with all three colours sharp was something any ED lens did exceptionally well
Working as I was back then, in a pro lab doing, amongst other things, running (with others) C41, E6 Dip N Dunk processors, with E6 running shed loads of 135 stuff for magazine work from sport photographers, quite a few of which dropped in to check out either a clip test, or just check out their work.
One noticed a trend, they invariably ran the minimum equipment they needed, but it also at the same time needed to cover as many bases as possible. Filter size played a bit into the equation as well. One would see the Nikkor 85/1.4 180/2.8 ED then either the 300/4.5 ED or the 400/5.6 ED. All these lenses ran a 72mm filter, making life pretty cheap and easy.
Then there was the wider stuff, first cab off the rank was often the 18/3.5 with CRC (Close Range Correction, floating elements to the rest of the world). It also ran a 72mm filter.
The rest of the wide to normal and slightly longer focal lengths stuff ran 52mm filters.
I saw and spoke to one photographer with the legendary Nikkor 300/2 IF-ED which ran internal 52mm filters. He covered automobile racing at the top level and was pretty good at it. His 300/2 IF-ED Nikkor was the same price as the average suburban house price in Melbourne at the time he purchased it.
He ran with the 85/1.4, 180/2.8 ED and the 300/2 IF-ED on three F3 bodies all with drives attached and the 18/3.5 in the bag. His work sort of stood well above most other 135 transparency stuff we developed. Firstly for the amount he shot, secondly for the accuracy of exposure, thirdly for accuracy of focus and lastly and very interestingly, for using 100 ASA film when almost all others were using 400 ASA film.
It was his work with these fast and beautifully made lenses, which made me desire using and/or owning them. I own the 85/1.4 and the 180/2.8 ED and they do pop and give that really easy to focus 3D effect in the viewfinder and allow me to make wonderful prints to this day.
Mick.