Nothing odd about this lens, in fact I bought one new at a shop some years ago and worked it very hard too, and when it was introduced it was hailed as a trailblazer as yet criticized for its inherent shortcomings.
It was made during the earliest days of 35mm reflex camera autofocus technology; Pentax ME-F and Canon T80 both showed some limited autofocus capabilities, but Vivitar wanted to have a lens which could fit standard manyal focus cameras btu offering autoficus function: the only way was to have it built into the lens itself as a completely self-contained unit.
Optically, it was an Opcon-designed 200/3.3, with internal focus, a beam-splitter prism inside bleeds off a fixed percentage of light so that it functions like a 200/3.5. Extra optics under the beam splitter provides the Honeywell constrast detection sensor with a surrogate film plane, and a small motor was used to drive the focussing element.
Even with the presence of the beam-splitter prism, I found the imaging quality excellent; after all it's a real Series 1 (Opcon designed). I can hardly say that the autofocus feature was gimmicky, but like such early experiments, its operation is nowhere near that in modern autofocus reflex cameras, mainly due to sensor technology.
Nevertheless, several lens-integral autofocus lenses followed: Tamron made a zoom, Cosina and Sigma also made a few as well.