mopar_guy
Member
I have a couple of Tokina variable aperture zooms that I bought new in about 1984. During this period, most consumer oriented 35mm SLRs had some kind of TTL metering as well as Auto exposure modes. These lenses both have two aperture index marks. The first mark in white indexes the aperture for the shortest focal length of the lens and the orange index mark indicates the aperture for the longest focal length. There is a one stop difference when zooming all the way from shortest to longest focal length.
One lens is the Tokina SZ-X210 which is a 70-210mm lens with a variable aperture of f/4-5.6. So when you would use this lens at 70mm and f8 and the you zoom to 210mm you get an aperture of f11 if you don't change the aperture setting. This was a fairly common design for the mid 1980's. There were also zoom lenses that had constant apertures throughout the zoom range. These were generally built to a higher standard and sold for two or three times the amount each.
One lens is the Tokina SZ-X210 which is a 70-210mm lens with a variable aperture of f/4-5.6. So when you would use this lens at 70mm and f8 and the you zoom to 210mm you get an aperture of f11 if you don't change the aperture setting. This was a fairly common design for the mid 1980's. There were also zoom lenses that had constant apertures throughout the zoom range. These were generally built to a higher standard and sold for two or three times the amount each.