I'd be very interested to find out what you think of it too Uncle Bill, I hope you will post something about it when you get some results.I'm going to try out this lens on Friday with my F-1n with some Legacy Pro 400 and see what I get. The lens I have is the early chrome nose FD version.
I've tested the Thorium lens against the new type FD f2 and find the reverse but the difference to be too small to be significant for practical purposes, I've also tested the FDn 35mm f2.8 which is also a very fine performer.as long as the lens doesn't need parts then cleaning one of these lenses is easy...I normally charge around $60-70 AUS to do one...
The old SSC lenses are quite sharp - although I wouldn't call them L lenses. Canon did have "Flourite" lenses - these had a green band around the hood (if there was a built in hood) - and were marked flourite on th ename ring. Flourite lenses ar enot common - there was a 24mm which I've never seen, a 55/1.2 which they made around 350 off, plus the 300/2.8 flourite. These are all old FD mount.
There was also a 300mm (F5.6 I think) plus another longer lens which was also a Floutire made in FL mount...
The OFD 35/2 was a nice lens - but the NFD 35/2 was sharper - at least it was when I tested them side by side...
But not by much
Have fun
Yes that's right, except these lenses were f2 not 2.5There were 3 FD lenses of the type 35/2.5:
no marking (possibly with chromed front bayonet), concave front lens, 1971
SSC marked, black front bayonet, concave front lens, 1973
SSC marked, black front bayonet, re-designed optics, convex front lens, 1976
New FD-bayonet, black front bayonet, re-designed optics, convex front lens, 1979
So, I guess you all are talking about the first two ones concerning that radioactive issue.
The 24mm and 55mm were not flourite lenses with a green ring, there were aspherical versions with a red ring, the original reason for red and green rings. QUOTE]
Sorry - it's been 20 years since I was a camera technician at Canon. Even then the Old FD mount (Chrome ring) lenses were considered obsolete - that is - you couldn't order spare parts for them...I still remember the 300/2.8 I couldn't repair for a lack of parts
I think I saw 1 of the 24mm lenses, and maybe 2 or 3 of the 55mm lenses..plus a single f1.2/85mm OFD ASP lens. These were very uncommon in Australia - I'm guessing the high price had something to do with it?
Then again - I've seen well over a dozen f0.95/50mm rangefinder lenses.....
The difference is that with modern computers physicists can with Computer Aided Design can do what used to take years of painstaking calculations in an afternoon.
The current Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 optics are EXACTLY the same as the 1967 Canon 50mm FL f/1.4 II, no change in FD mount and no change in EF mount. 42 years and counting, good optics stand the test of time. Computerized designs have helped to improve zoom lenses tremendously but for good prime lenses I think the designers in the last century knew what they were doing.
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