Ian Grant
Subscriber
Yes, I meant 30mm. Sorry. My Pentacon is 30mm.
The Pentacon 30mm f3.5 was the Lydith rebranded when the Meyer name was dropped by VEB Pentacon.
Ian
Yes, I meant 30mm. Sorry. My Pentacon is 30mm.
Would you care to share which version? I have a few 1.4s, including a Chinon Tomioka and a Mamiya/Sekor SX, but would be curious to hear more about the earlier iteration of the M/S.FWIW, as one who owns an embarrassingly large number of 50-55mm lenses, I hafta say that there's a version of the Mamiya/Sekor 55 f/1.4 (M42) that's my favorite "normal" of that speed...
This Mamiya/Sekor MIGHT be related to the Tomioka/Rikenon lenses. don't know for sure
I recently got a Xenon 50mm f1.9 with this kind of semi-auto aperture, and it's got something like 15 blades. How many does your Ennalyt have?I must have 25 50mm lenses. They all perform about the same and lose contrast when wide open. They have different mounts and some are faster than others. In terms of 'rare' 42mm lens, this Enna Edixa Color-Ennalyt f1.9 is my rarest.
It has a unique auto aperture that has to be cocked after each exposure. One step ahead of a pre-set lens.
That does seem rather excessive! And the lens isn't a true macro I think, it only goes to 1:3 magnification.Another contender is the Chinon 50mm 1.7 Macro, a copy of the Kern Swiss 50mm made by Chinon for the M42 rebanded Alpa. While looking for a Chinion copy I found a Kern Swiss 50mm in M43 mount, never seen one before but so expensive. Seller wants over 6 grand for it.
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We are talking semantics again, but I think the lens must be rare and/or expensive in order to count as desirable.
I recently got a Xenon 50mm f1.9 with this kind of semi-auto aperture, and it's got something like 15 blades. How many does your Ennalyt have?
I recently got a Xenon 50mm f1.9 with this kind of semi-auto aperture, and it's got something like 15 blades. How many does your Ennalyt have?
Does your Biotar have 10 blades? I have a (non-working) preset Biotar in m42, and there seems to be a fully automatic one too, but I'm not sure I've seen a semi-auto one in m42.I have a Praktina (so not m42) Zeiss Jena Biotar 58/2 in semi-auto. I guess most/all semi-auto lenses for Praktina were made for m42 as well? Most of them were from Zeiss, but a few others made them too: http://www.praktina.com/pulen01.htm (this does not list your Xenon, which was not released for Praktina).
Does your Biotar have 10 blades? I have a (non-working) preset Biotar in m42, and there seems to be a fully automatic one too, but I'm not sure I've seen a semi-auto one in m42.
Come to think of it, it could be a good idea to put together a list of preset and semi-auto fifties in m42: there shouldn't an awful lot of such lenses, and they can be rather interesting one way (aperture blades) or another (optics).
Didn't even know such a thing existed!version with Flektoskop screw mount
Same here, 10 blades on the Biotar 58/2 semi-auto.
A few others, all Praktina:
- Sonnar 180/2.8 (preset, the version with Flektoskop screw mount and adapters to Praktina/m42/Exakta, not the later P6 mount one with adapter. There were 3rd party adapters to P6 for this version): if I count right, 18 blades!
- Biometar 80/2.8 preset (this is the 35mm version, not the P6 lens, smaller): 12 blades.
- Biometar 120/2.8 auto (technically the same as the P6 lens, but no adapter/fix Praktina mount): 8 blades
- Flektogon 35/2.8, auto: 6 blades only.
Still have a Tessar 50/2.8 preset, Sonnar 135/4 preset and a Pancolar 50/2 auto, but didn't had them close right now for checking.
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