While it has limitations, I am sure I am going to enjoy this.
And best of all, I think my 2x converter will work with it.
No prizes for guessing what it is:

(And I will try to keep this effect under control in future, but I just had to do it once
 )
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		 A New toyA friend visited today and gave me a new toy to play with While it has limitations, I am sure I am going to enjoy this. And best of all, I think my 2x converter will work with it. No prizes for guessing what it is:  (And I will try to keep this effect under control in future, but I just had to do it once  ) Greg It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do 
 Re: A New toyMirror lens? 
 Re: A New toyA DVD player? TFF (Trevor) My History Blog: Your Brisbane: Past & Present My Photo Blog: The Foto Fanatic Nikon stuff! 
 Re: A New toyDoughnut maker? Or 500mm mirror lens Regards, Patrick
 Two or three lights, any lens on a light-tight box are sufficient for the realisation of the most convincing image. Man Ray 1935. Our mug is smug 
 Re: A New toyWhatever it is, it appears to have some sort of a focus issue.     I'm in the mirror lens camp. g. Gary Stark Nikon, Canon, Bronica .... stuff The people who want English to be the official language of the United States are uncomfortable with their leaders being fluent in it - US Pres. Bartlet 
 Re: A New toyIt quite a good technique to keep us all in suspense. Is it a new lens, a camara, a mirror, It’s a microscope? No! Suffer you lot!    
 Re: A New toyOut of focus lensbaby   Chris -------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left 
 Re: A New toyI have no idea, but would err towards a mirror lens if pushed. Fuji X-Pro1 | X-E1 | X-T1 | XF14 | XF23 | XF27 | XF35 | XF56 | XF60 | XF10-24 | XF18-55 | XF55-200 | MCEX-11  http://gmarshall.zenfolio.com http://xtographer.weebly.com 
 Re: A New toy
 Yes to both 
 Yes I've discovered the AF is glacially slow on this beastie. Now I come to think on it, I've been to glaciers that move faster.  I remember when these first became popular. Lots of doughnut shaped sparkles on lakes. Then the fashion changed to "creamy" bokeh and they vanished almost overnight. However I think that if I use it as originally intended as a field use telephoto, and can control the doughnuts somehow, it will produce some stunning images. Greg It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do 
 Re: A New toyLucky the D800 has AF capability to f/8 on all those centre focus points   D600, D7000, Nikon/Sigma/Tamron Lenses, Nikon Flashes, Sirui/Manfrotto/Benro Sticks Rodney - My Photo Blog Want: Fast Wide (14|20|24) 
 Re: A New toyGood point, except that when Greg says the AF is slower than some glaciers he has seen (2 metres per day would be the fastest) I think he actually means it is manual focus. I thought I posted a comment at the start of this thread. Don't know what happened to it. It will be interesting Greg to see how good you find the image quality but it should be light and portable and fun. I had access in the late 80s to a Tokina 500mm that focused close enough to double as a macro lens. I also used to have a Vivitar Series 1 600mm but sold it in the early 90s so don't know how good it would be on a modern body though nowhere near as sharp, I would assume, as a 300mm f2.8 + TC200III. 
 Re: A New toy
   
 While it won't autofocus, the in-viewfinder focus assist lamps work on both the D800 and the D7000 
 Precisely. And it came at the right price   I am actually wondering if these might be more use now than back in the day. Then you had two degrees of freedom: Shutter and Aperture. This "lens" fixes the latter, so you only have one degree of freedom left. That made it pretty limiting. These days, you can lock aperture (by selecting this lens) and still have a reasonable amount of latitude by playing with ISO and shutter. Actually aperture is not quite fixed. The manual talks about changing effective aperture by adding ND filters. The original ND4 that comes with it is long gone though. The post 1983 versions of this lens focused down to 1.5m and were quite an effective macro. My one is the earlier model that close focuses to 4 metres. There was an even earlier model that was f/5 but close focused to 15m - if you can call that close! Greg It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do 
 Re: A New toyI used one like this back in the (film) day. Apart from the specular highlights that form donuts, not a bad bit of kit. Have fun. TFF (Trevor) My History Blog: Your Brisbane: Past & Present My Photo Blog: The Foto Fanatic Nikon stuff! 
 Re: A New toyThe first real photo:  I found I needed to up the contrast slightly and lower the metered exposure by 2.5 stops! It may just be the image, but on the other hand, the lens may just be faster than advertised. I will leave it at f/8 for now, but I may adjust the setting in the manual lens section if the issue continues. Focus was easier than I expected to set as long as you start somewhere in the right ballpark, but the DOF (about 25mm at 6m) is quite small & even slight movement leads to donuts. I think a tripod is a must. This was handheld. Also, shooting into the light is a real no-no. Not for flare which seems nonexistent, but to avoid the OOF sparkles. Greg It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do 
 Re: A New toylooking good!!! Cameron Nikon F/Nikon 1 | Hasselblad V/XPAN| Leica M/LTM |Sony α/FE/E/Maxxum/M42 Wishlist Nikkor 24/85 f/1.4| Fuji Natura Black Scout-Images | Flickr | 365Project 
 Re: A New toyI guess the exposure oddity is due to the fact that the camera falls back to centre-weighted metering with non-CPU lenses. That just isn't as clever as matrix metering, and it's easy to see why it would have overexposed this particular shot. Cheers Steffen. lust for comfort suffocates the soul 
 Re: A New toy
 Except the manual claims 3D metering with non CPU lenses. Still early days yet. Play and learn. EDIT: I rechecked the manual it said: 
 So it looks like you are right, but I have to select it myself. Greg It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do 
 Re: A New toyEither way, I wouldn't consider this a weakness or drawback of the lens. Once you're aware of this you can easily work around it. Cheers Steffen. lust for comfort suffocates the soul 
 
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