Some earlier ones are very poor and definitely not sharp as many of us have found first hand. The later ones are OK but it took 3 before I found one that is a good sharp performer.
Ian
Printable View
I had a Schneider SA 90/8 that cost $200. I think that's really cheap, but "cheap" might mean something different to others. If the OP is looking for a $100 lens maybe that's not cheap after all.
There WAS an Ilex "clone" of the Super-Angulon, it could be cheap.
I would wait and search for a SA 90/8. I was patient and found a late, mint beauty on ebay for a little over two hundred. They are out there. The funny thing about ebay is that you never know when it is your time to luck out. One day there will be twenty people bidding up to the stars for a particular lens, and then the next day the same lens in the same condition isn't getting any bids. It is those sleepy periods when you can snatch up your lens at a good price. Don't be over anxious, sit back and watch the item until the last few seconds, then zap in your bid, especially if there is only one bid. Because the guy with the one bid may assume that no one is interested in the lens. The other bidder won't have time to outbid you unless he has a snipe program set up. The long and short of it, I won my beautiful, mint Super Angulon 90/8 for a song.
Exactly. I got my current 90, a Nikon f/8 model, for less than most people pay for their newer Schneider 90/8. I sniped about 5 on ebay before I got one at a heck of a deal.
I've offered the the original poster my 90/8 Calumet branded Super Angulon for $200 plus shipping... I've had my fun with it, would be good to see it go to a loving home rather than sitting in my "Spare Gear" bag at home...
What do you think of Caltar II*N 90mm F6.8?
Any limitations on movements?
90mm f/8 WA Geronars come up from time to time. They are not terribly expensive. I think the image circle is about 170mm so it might be tighter on 4x5 than some of the other suggestions.
It's not age that matters, but how the old ones have been stored. Angulons should always lie flat, especially in hot climates. The inner elements in each cell are only held by the cement, and old Canada Balsam tends to "creep" if the lens is stored "vertically". My own 1939-model is just as sharp as my 1959-model.