PDA

View Full Version : Rodenstock Grandagon 90 - age?



Matt_1193
23-Mar-2002, 21:14
I do most of my landscapes with a 4x5 Tachihara and a Schneider 210 and have lat ely been looking for a wider lens for closer quarters.(specifically Antelope Can yon). I thought about an older lens like the Ektar 127, and got some good advice from this group, but I don't like the idea of having just enough coverage without mov ements. So I am considering a used 90mm for that purpose. I have few questions that I can't seem to find answers for, and am hoping some o f you can enlighten me a bit. 1. How long has the Rodenstock (Grandagon?)90 been manufactured? Are they all mu lti-coated, or are there old single-coats lurking out there? 2. Can this lens be used successfully without an expensive center filter, or is the falloff too apparent? 3. Are there vignetting problems when using standard screw-in filters? and 4. as long as I'm on the topic, is this too wide for slot canyon work - should I think more like 150mm? Thanks in advance.

Nicholas Fiduccia
24-Mar-2002, 01:19
Matt,

I can answer one of your questions! 90mm is not at all too short for slot canyon work IMHO. When I venture into a slot canyon with a 35mm system, I take a 24mm (`~75mm in 4x5), a 35, and a 50mm although the 50 sees little use. Enjoy!

neil poulsen
24-Mar-2002, 02:00
Consider a 120mm S.A., or perhaps a 121mm S.A., which is the single-coated version.

Pete Andrews
25-Mar-2002, 08:32
I've used a 90mmm Grandagon-N (f/6.8) for about 15 years, and it was secondhand when I got it! I guess it dates from about the mid 1970s, and it's fully multicoated - I think all the 'N' versions are. I believe there were plain vanilla Grandagons made earlier which were single coated.A 90 mm lens on 5x4 gives you about the same angle-of-view, across the long side of the frame, as a 28mm lens on 35mm. So, it's not really that wide.The light fall-off isn't too severe unless the lens is shifted fairly drastically, and then a centre-filter is desirable, though maybe still not essential.