Picked up this lens which came with a Agiflex, it had a slide on collar so it could mount onto the camera.
Its got 15 blades and 82mm across the lens glass and is bloody heavy, Any idea?
Picked up this lens which came with a Agiflex, it had a slide on collar so it could mount onto the camera.
Its got 15 blades and 82mm across the lens glass and is bloody heavy, Any idea?
Last edited by scottmorgan; 25-Dec-2018 at 13:26.
Looks interesting, what is the coverage and focal length?
Sorry it 32mm
Probably 80mm across. A few scrooges around, lighten up. It's Christmas 🎄🎅
Anti-Xmas spirit aside, when I first saw the picture I wondered whether it might be a lens from an aerial camera. Possible, but it lacks the stigmata. Most, not all, lenses for medium format aerial cameras have three pins at the front of the barrel, 120 degrees apart. These are for attaching spring-loaded filter holders. Aircraft vibrate, screw-in filters can and do unscrew themselves. Spring-loaded filter holders can't and don't.
I'm not acquainted with all of the likely ex-aerial camera lenses, but it is wrong for the ones I know. It has a diaphragm, so it isn't an adapted projection lens.
Sorry not sure what I wrote before but the lens is about 82mm across the front optic and not sure where I got 32mm from
From a little more research it looks very similar to a kodak aero ektar 7" but the barrel and aperture ring look completely different.
Yep, I thought about the 7"/2.5 AE, and agree with you. The front of the barrel is wrong for that lens.
Pfsor, "aerial cameras" includes gun cameras that shot 16 mm cine film. Some of these used quite small lenses. Not what those of us who adapt lenses from aerial cameras for use on, e.g., Speed Graphics, tend to think of as aerial camera lenses but that's because we can't use them, not because they weren't fitted to aerial cameras.
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