Does anybody happen to know what the front thread of this lens is? It appears to be 59 or 60mm. I know it is an oddball size, maybe a series thread?
Thanks for any help!
Rolfe
Does anybody happen to know what the front thread of this lens is? It appears to be 59 or 60mm. I know it is an oddball size, maybe a series thread?
Thanks for any help!
Rolfe
If I remember correctly, even though it appears threaded, it actually isn't. This lens requires a slip-on adapter.
Jim, that's quite possible. There are threads there, but they are only a few mm deep.
EDIT: Just re-checked and Jim is correct, it appears to be threaded but isn't, so I'm now in search of a push on lens hood solution.
Last edited by Rolfe Tessem; 25-Apr-2014 at 12:04.
Measure the outside diameter. Slip-ons are often listed on the auction sites, or go to an OLD camera Store.
Last edited by Jim Noel; 25-Apr-2014 at 15:11. Reason: wrong word
Jim, thanks for the helpful advice.
I did visit the auction site and after several hundred non-applicable listings, found one that I think will work. Not much of a risk at $12.00, so we'll see :-).
Thanks,
Rolfe
The drama with Wollies (and most other vintage glass)! Front thread sizes are often so...odd. They're neither made for, nor fit screw-in filters. I have many Wollensak lenses; most need filter adapters, save my 10" F6.something Series I, which is happy with my 43.5 to 52mm adapter. E.g. my otherwise wonderful 15" f5.6 has a 78.5mm thread, or thereabouts. I never found good adapters for my 104 and 159mm W.A. Raptars and in the end made nice (52mm) adapters myself. Generally though clearly e.g. S.K.Grimes territory if one doesn't want a clumsy/push-on solution. I sometimes wonder why no-one would have gotten around to producing proper metric, or Series (non-push-on rubbish*) adapter rings en-masse; all the scratchy ones I had were either wobbly, or exceedingly tight "solutions". These days the market seems of course a bit small.
*(yes, yes, some push/slip-on adapters are more than ok in practice; still...I'm not a fan)
http://www.jeffbridges.com/perception.html "Whether you think you can, or think you can't, you are right."
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