AI & AIs Nikkors had aluminum barrels and, I believe, a black laquer finish rather than being anodized.
The OP had it about the "look". As both, chromium and aluminium, surfaces show up in a variation of gloss, I guess the differentiation does not even matter in this thread.
The OP said he liked the look of "chrome on chrome" and used an M3 (IIRC) as an example. Chrome doesn't look anything like aluminum and neither look anything like nickel. For that matter, satin chrome (Camera body/lens) doesn't look at all like glossy chrome (Car bumper) So it is indeed all about the look... of various different finishes.
But it's 2013, and all the magpies call anything shiny and silvery "chrome", it seems.![]()
Well if we're going to be engaging in pointless pedantry, I may as well point out that chrome does actually look like aluminum in some ways. As well it looks like nickel in some ways too. To say it doesn't look anything like it is plainly false.
Yes, they're silvery and shiny, as I pointed out. They're all in the spectrum of shiny silvery things. Green and red are in the spectrum of colors, do they look anything alike? Besides being colors, that is?
Highly polished surfaces of chromium and blank aluminiun can be distinguished. But when the brass surface is matted before chroming and you got a fairly etched aluminum surface before anodizing, it is getting more difficult to distinguish.
This is true.
Though I have polished some types of aluminum to a high degree, and had average people think it was in fact, chrome plated. Sometimes it would have fooled me unless I really looked at it, if I had not been the one who polished it.
Does anyone have a top on how to best shine up an old lens like this (regardless of chrome, aluminum, nickel, etc.)? I have a few old FSU ones that I'd like to look less dull and I'm loath to try anything stronger than glass cleaner on them.
The only inherent quality of green is that it is green, so it's a different matter than two different materials which share similar visual characteristics. All still beside the point of the thread though.I'm sure most of us understood what the OP meant.
"Green" is not an inherent quality. The wavelength of the radiation (which we perceive as "green") is an inherent quality.
Nope, you're wrong once again Yash...
"Green" is not an inherent quality. The wavelength of the radiation (which we perceive as "green") is an inherent quality.
I understood what the OP meant. I was making a point to the others failing to distinguish between various substances and finishes.
I prefer black
Less blingy
Later Zeiss were all two tone aluminum and the exposure aluminum gripping area shows wear quite easily
Well, meanwhile I got intrigued by this topic and re-viewed my collection. And I have to admit that the matted chromium and matted anodized aluminium surfaces could be distinguished in specular light, with the former having more gloss.
But with much more surface treatments employed nowadays in the process of anodizing this may not apply any longer.
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