Showing posts with label best camera lens manufacturers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best camera lens manufacturers. Show all posts

Saturday, June 7, 2014

camera lens?




sinjin369





Answer
Camera lens
A photographic lens (or more correctly, objective) is an optical lens or assembly of lenses used in conjunction with a camera body and mechanism to make images of objects either on photographic film or on other media capable of storing an image chemically or electronically.

While in principle a simple convex lens will suffice, in practice a compound lens made up of a number of optical lens elements is required to correct the many optical aberrations that arise.

There is no difference in principle between a lens used for a camera, a telescope, a microscope, or other apparatus, but the detailed design and construction are different.

A lens may be permanently fixed to a camera, or it may be interchangeable with lenses of different focal lengths and other properties.

A practical camera lens will often incorporate an aperture adjustment mechanism, often an iris diaphragm, to regulate the amount of light that may pass. A shutter, to regulate the time during which light may pass, may be incorporated within the lens assembly, or may be within the camera, or even, rarely, in front of the lens.

The lens may usually be focused by adjusting the distance from the lens assembly to the image-forming surface, or by moving elements within the lens assembly.

The lens elements are made of transparent materials. Glass is the most widely used material due to its good optical properties and resistance to scratching. Various plastics, such as acrylic (or PMMA), the material of Plexiglas, can also be used. Plastics allow the manufacture of strongly aspherical lens elements which are difficult or impossible to manufacture in glass, and which simplify or improve lens manufacture and performance. Plastics are not used for the outermost elements of all but the cheapest lenses as they scratch easily. Moulded plastic lenses have been used for the cheapest disposable cameras for many years, and have acquired a bad reputation: manufacturers of quality optics tend to use euphemisms such as "optical resin".

The maximum usable aperture of a lens is usually specified, as the focal ratio or f-number, which is equal to the focal length divided by the actual aperture diameter in the same units. The lower the number, the more light is admitted through the lens. Practical lens assemblies may also contain mechanisms to deal with measuring light, to hold the aperture open until the instant of exposure to allow SLR cameras to focus with a bright image, etc.

The two main optical parameters of a photographic lens are the focal length and the maximum aperture. The focal length determines the angle of view, the size of the image relative to that of the object, and the perspective; the maximum aperture limits the brightness of the image and the fastest shutter speed usable.

Focal lengths are usually specifed in millimeters (mm), but older lenses marked in centimeter (cm) and inches are still to be found. For a given film or sensor size, specifed by the length of the diagonal, a lens may be classified as

* Normal lens: angle of view of the diagonal about 50°, the same as the human eye: a focal length approximately equal to the diagonal produces this angle.
* Wide-angle lens: focal length shorter than normal, and angle of view wider.
* Long-focus or telephoto lens: focal length longer than normal, and angle of view narrower. A distinction is sometimes made between a long-focus lens and a true telephoto lens: the telephoto lens is designed to be physically shorter than its focal length.

The 35mm film format is so prevalent that a 90mm lens, for example, is always assumed to be a moderate telephoto; but for the 7x5cm format it is normal, while on the large 5x4 inch format it is a wide-angle.

The real difference between lenses of different focal length is not the image size, but the perspective. You can take photographs of a person stretching out a hand with a wideangle, a normal lens, and a telephoto, which contain exactly the same image size by changing your distance from the subject. But the perspective will be different. With the wideangle, the hand will be exaggeratedly large relative to the head; as the focal length increases, the emphasis on the outstretched hand decreases. However, if you take pictures from the same distance, and enlarge and crop them to contain the same view, the pictures will be truly identical. A moderate long-focus (telephoto) lens is often recommended for portraiture because the flatter perspective is considered to look more realistic.

Some lenses, called zoom lenses, have a focal length which varies as internal elements are moved, typically by rotating the barrel or pressing a button which activates an electric motor. The lens may zoom from moderate wide-angle, through normal, to moderate telephoto; or from normal to extreme telephoto. The zoom range is limited by manufacturing constraints; the ideal of a lens of large maximum aperture which will zoom from extreme wideangle to extreme telephoto is not attainable. Zoom lenses are widely used for small-format cameras of all types: still and cine cameras with fixed or interchangeable lenses. Bulk and price limit their use for larger film sizes.

The complexity of a lensâthe number of elements and their degree of asphericityâdepends upon the angle of view and the maximum aperture. An extreme wideangle lens of large aperture must be of very complex construction to correct for optical aberrations, which are worse at the edge of the field and when the edge of a large lens is used for image-forming. A long-focus lens of small aperture can be of very simple construction to attain comparable image quality; a doublet (with two elements) will often suffice. Some older cameras were fitted with "convertible" lenses of normal focal length; the front element could be unscrewed, leaving a lens of twice the focal length and angle of view, and half the aperture. The simpler half-lens was of adequate quality for the narrow angle of view and small relative aperture. Obviously the bellows had to extend to twice the normal length.

Good-quality lenses with maximum aperture no greater than f/2.8 and fixed, normal, focal length need three (triplet) or four elements (the trade name "Tessar" derives from the Greek tessera, meaning "four"). The widest-range zooms often have fifteen or more. The reflection of light at each of the many interfaces between different optical media (air, glass, plastic) seriously degraded the contrast and color saturation of early lenses, zoom lenses in particular, especially where the lens was directly illuminated by a light source. The introduction many years ago of optical coatings, and advances in coating technology over the years, have resulted in major improvements, and modern high-quality zoom lenses give images of quite acceptable contrast.

How do I know what camera lens go with my camera?




Zack





Answer
Camera lenses and cameras have mount systems - the mechanical method by which a lens is attached to the camera.

Each camera manufacturer has its own mount system. So you will need to choose a lens with the same mount system as your camera. Check the manufacturers website, either of the camera, or the lenses. They will tell you which lens goes with which camera.

If you see a lens for sale somewhere, and the lens mount is not mentioned, then don't buy it. Because it likely won't work on your camera.




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Saturday, May 31, 2014

Are camera lens fittings all the same?




vivalazhon


i have an old minolta SLR camera with a few different lenses... i want to get a new digital SLR.... are the lens fittings standard, or would i need to buy another minolta?


Answer
All camera manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount. Therefore, a Canon lens will not mount on a Nikon or Olympus or Sony or Pentax body and their lenses will not mount on any other body. There are adapters that allow you to use a Sony lens on a Canon or Olympus but you lose a lot of the features like metering and auto focus. The one exception is the Fujifilm DSLR line which uses a Nikon lens mount.

When Minolta introduced the world's first full-featured Auto Focus 35mm SLR in 1985 they changed their lens mount from the MC/MD bayonet mount to the A-mount. After the Konica-Minolta merger, Sony bought the DSLR technology from K-M and is still using the A-mount.

If your lenses are from the SRT or X series of Minolta cameras (MC/MD bayonet mount) then you will need an adapter to use them on a Sony or Canon or Olympus DSLR. If you have an old Minolta Maxxum then they can be used on any Sony DSLR.

slr film camera lens?




sdhar_11@s


i need a lens that has an aperture range that goes from f/1.8 to f/16. does anyone know where i can find one for a decent price like less than $200.00???? also, what slr camera i can use with that lens


Answer
Minolta, Pentax, Olympus, Nikon, and Canon all offered a 50mm f1.8 lens for their 35mm film cameras. A better choice, in my opinion, would be a 50mm f1.4.

Sony, Pentax, Olympus, Nikon, Sigma, Fuji and Nikon all offer 50mm f1.4 or f1.8 for their DSLR cameras.

Usually, you choose a camera first and then buy lenses for it. All manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount which means Sony (and Minolta Maxxum AF) lenses only fit Sony DSLRs; Nikon lenses can be used on Nikon and Fuji DSLRs (Fuji builds their DSLR on a Nikon body); Canon lenses only fit Canon bodies, etc.




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Sunday, May 11, 2014

slr film camera lens?




sdhar_11@s


i need a lens that has an aperture range that goes from f/1.8 to f/16. does anyone know where i can find one for a decent price like less than $200.00???? also, what slr camera i can use with that lens


Answer
Minolta, Pentax, Olympus, Nikon, and Canon all offered a 50mm f1.8 lens for their 35mm film cameras. A better choice, in my opinion, would be a 50mm f1.4.

Sony, Pentax, Olympus, Nikon, Sigma, Fuji and Nikon all offer 50mm f1.4 or f1.8 for their DSLR cameras.

Usually, you choose a camera first and then buy lenses for it. All manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount which means Sony (and Minolta Maxxum AF) lenses only fit Sony DSLRs; Nikon lenses can be used on Nikon and Fuji DSLRs (Fuji builds their DSLR on a Nikon body); Canon lenses only fit Canon bodies, etc.

What camera brand is best based on lens?




riceandram


I am wanting to get a camera.

While the camera body is an essential part, I have heard it is not as important as the lens you are using due to the fact that you can change your camera body more often than your lens and also simply, lenses are more expensive. I know there are types of lens mounts that make them incompatible with other camera bodies from other manufacturers. I have also heard that certain manufacturers such as Canon may change their lens mount more often than others making it harder to keep the same set of lenses for long periods of time.

So, I want to know which camera manufacturer should I go with based solely on the quality of lens and the life (how long you could keep them) of the lens.

ty in advance



Answer
First, to clear up your misconceptions, all camera manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount which is fully incompatible with other manufacturers' camera bodies. Sony lenses for Sony cameras, Pentax lenses for Pentax cameras, Nikon lenses for Nikon cameras, Canon lenses for Canon cameras. The only exception is Olympus and Panasonic that share a common Micro 4/3 lens mount.

Nikon - Same lens mount since 1959. Although they now offer lenses designated DX for their cropped-sensor DSLR cameras (D3000, D3100, D5000, D5100, D7000) and FX for their full-frame DSLR cameras (D700, D3) the DX lenses can be used on the FX bodies. The FX bodies will simply crop the image to the same size as that of a DX sensor. However, Nikon doesn't put a focusing motor in any DSLR body below the D7000. The D3000, D3100, D5000 and D5100 all require use of the more expensive AF-S lenses for auto focus. All those excellent Nikon AF lenses can be used on those bodies but only with manual focus.

Canon - Abandoned the FD lens mount for the EF lens mount around 1988. Canon EF lenses can be used on any Canon EOS AF 35mm camera or DSLR - cropped sensor or full-frame (5D, 1D). However, in order to have a lower-cost lens line, Canon introduced the EF-S lens line. These lenses can only be used on their cropped-sensor DSLR cameras. So someone who buys, say, a Canon T3i and 2 or 3 EF-S lenses will have to buy all new lenses should they ever upgrade to a Canon full-frame DSLR. An EF-S lens CANNOT be used on a Canon full-frame DSLR because it protrudes into the camera body and will damage the mirror.

Pentax - Has used the same K lens mount since 1975. Any Pentax K mount lens ever made can be used - with limitations - on any of their DSLR cameras. If the lens was designed to auto focus on a Pentax 35mm film camera it will auto focus on a Pentax DSLR because Pentax, unlike Nikon, has a focusing motor in every DSLR body.

Sony - When Sony bought the DSLR technology and manufacturing rights from Konica-Minolta in 2006 they wisely kept the legacy Minolta Maxxum AF A lens mount introduced with the Minolta Maxxum AF 7000 35mm film camera in 1985. The Maxxum 7000 had a focusing motor in the camera body as does every Sony DSLR. You could buy a Maxxum AF 70-210mm f4 zoom made in 1985 and it will auto focus on a Sony DSLR as it should.

NOTE: Minolta made some of the best lenses available in their day. During their technology sharing arrangement with Leica back in the late 1970's. the Minolta XE-7 was used by Leica as their R-3 and Leica used the Minolta 35-70mm f3.5 and 70-210mm f4 constant aperture zoom lenses re-branded as Leica lenses made in Japan. So if you ever see a Leica 35-70mm f3.5 or 70-210mm f4 zoom lens it was designed and manufactured by Minolta with a Leica mount. Leica also used Minolta's 16mm f2.8 180 degree full-frame fisheye lens. The Minolta XD-11 (the world's first multi-mode 35mm camera with Aperture or Shutter Priority as well as full Manual metering) was used by Leica as their R-4 and R-5 cameras.

Olympus - Abandoned the OM lens mount for the 4/3 lens mount when they introduced their DSLR line. They have now more or less abandoned the 4/3 lens mount for the Micro 4/3 lens mount.

Overall, you'd have to give the nod to Nikon for the greatest backwards lens compatibility closely followed by Pentax and then Sony.

Another plus for Sony and Pentax, in my opinion, is that both have their respective versions of Image Stabilization in their DSLR camera bodies. Nikon and Canon chose to place their versions of IS (IS for Canon, VR for Nikon) in some but not all of their lenses. With Sony and Pentax any lens used, regardless of its age, becomes an IS lens.

Always buy the best glass you can afford and with reasonable care a lens from any manufacturer will out last you.




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Wednesday, April 23, 2014

how do you read a lens?




coy5coy


1.

Canon EF-S 17-85MM f4-5.6 IS USM Standard Zoom Lens

can someone please break this down so I can understand how to read this please?


2.

Canon EF-S 17-85MM f4-5.6 IS USM Standard Zoom
Canon EF 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 DO IS USM Telephoto Zoom Lens

why would anyone want a zoom lens that stops at 85MM, isnt the larger the number better the zoom? Wouldnt the 300mm be much better because it zooms in better?



Answer
Canon is the manufacturer of the lens, meaning that the lens will mount onto a Canon body.

The focal length (e.g., "70-300mm) is the field of view that the lens can see. A "Normal" focal length is about 35mm on a consumer Canon DSLR and 50mm on a 35mm SLR. This gives roughly the perspective that we, as people, see. A wider lens can see more of a scene (think really big landscapes), but the perspective is exaggerated and as something gets close to the camera is starts to appear much larger. An example of this is the classic image of a dog poking it's nose towards camera; the nose will look really big while the rest of the dog is small because it's further back. A telephoto lens makes a distant scene look bigger (smaller field of view) and also flattens the picture. Think of a telephoto lens as being like a pair of binoculars and a wide angle lens as being those binoculars turned around backward.

EF stands for "ElectroFocus." This means that it is autofocus and will mount on an EOS camera (Any DSLR, recent 35mm SLR's too). An acronym of EF-S means that the lens will only work on cropped-sensor (aka, APS-C) DSLR's such as the Rebel series (or 300D/350D/400D/450D/1000D) and 10D/20D/30D/40D series. It will mount on any EOS camera, but light will not hit the corners of the image sensor or film on a non-cropped camera, and this will result in a big black circle near the edges of the image.

IS stands for image stabilization. This means that there are mechanisms in the lens that helps reduce the shake caused by hand holding it, which in turn makes it easier to shoot sharp images in low light situations.

USM is an UltraSonic Motor. A USM mechanism is virtually silent, and generally focuses much faster than non-USM glass.

DO means "Diffractive Optics" in Canon jargon, and DO lenses can be identified as having a green ring around the lens body towards the front of the lens. Diffractive Optics is a technology that allows very sharp lenses with virtually no chromatic aberration. These lenses are normally a bit smaller than one would expect for their focal length/speed as DO is used to reduce the need for huge pieces of glass, but these lenses are also very expensive. I've never heard of a bad DO lens.

Zoom, of course, means that the lens can change it's focal length -- zoom in and out. Zooms have generally lower image quality than a comparable fixed or prime lens, that does not zoom. A bigger zoom range does not imply better. As lenses are made to zoom more, they lose image quality because you're trying to make the same glass work for a wide range of focal lengths. Basically, you're making the glass perform at an okay level for any given focal length, but never excel at any given one either. A fixed/prime lens will usually give the best optical quality. After that, a small zoom range (16-30mm) will give the next best quality, then a medium zoom range (18-55mm), and a large zoom range (18-200mm or 70-300mm) will give the least optical quality. This is just a general guideline of course, optical quality varies significantly from lens to lens. The 17-85mm IS lens will be a better option if you had to choose just one lens right now, as it covers the "Normal" range, which is where the majority of your shots will come from. The 70-300 DO is an amazing lens, and would be a great second lens.

The f/# is the maximum aperture of the lens. A smaller number is generally better, as the lens can perform in lower-light situations and can also "Sweet spot" (get to it's best working conditions) at a lower aperture as well. A bigger aperture (lower number) means that there is a bigger hole for light to pass through in the lens, which means more light reaches the sensor in a given time, and thus the sensor can record the image faster than with a lens at a lower f/#.

all SLR cameras lens i want to understand?




XDXD


i want to know if all SLR brands can be used the same lens or different ones etc. like a Nikon lens on a canon camera or vice visa or other brands
thats A LOT of money you think anyone has made an extra extension to be place on lets say a canon camera and the extension is allowed to have any lens? because that would be very interesting product to buy



Answer
All camera manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount. Canon lenses for Canon, Nikon lenses for Nikon, Sony lenses for Sony, Penax lenses for Pentax, Olympus lenses for Olympus. The exceptions are Samsung and Fuji. Fuji DSLRs are built using a Nikon chassis and lens mount. Samsung DSLRs are built using a Pentax chassis and lens mount. Sony uses the Minolta Maxxum A-mount that dates back to 1985.

There are adapters that allow you to use a Nikon lens on a Canon or a Minolta SR (manual focus) mount lens on a Sony or Canon or Pentax or Olympus. The problem with adapters is that you have to use the lens in stop-down metering and manual focus. (Each camera requires a separate adapter).

The Tamron "Adaptall" adapters use the M42 screw mount on the lens and an adapter designed for each camera body. With it you could have a Pentax body and a Canon body and use the same lens on both cameras.

Minolta SR mount 250mm mirror lenses go for a premium on eBay and the word is they are being retrofitted with a Nikon mount. I've also seen a couple of SR mount lenses that have had the mount modified to mount to the Sony DSLR, supposedly with full metering.

All in all its still best to buy lenses designed for your camera.




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Friday, March 7, 2014

digital camera question?

Q. what's the difference between an optical zoom and a digital zoom on a camera? is it okay to have a digital zoom but not an optical zoom? what are they?


Answer
More and more camera manufacturers are choosing to label their digital cameras with the total (optical x digital) zoom. This is an unfortunate development and only serves to confuse consumers.

Most people who have used a 35mm camera or an APS camera are aware of only optical zoom. Optical zoom uses the optics

(lens) of the camera to bring the subject closer. Digital zoom is an invention of digital video cameras. It is not uncommon to see digital videocams with 300x digital zoom.

For our purpose, digital zoom is not really zoom, in the strictest definition of the term. What digital zoom does is enlarge a portion of the image, thus 'simulating' optical zoom. In other words, the camera crops a portion of the image and then enlarges it back to size. In so doing, you lose image quality. If you've been regularly using digital zoom and wondered why your pictures did not look that great, now you know.

Is digital zoom therefore all bad? No, not at all. It's a feature that you might want in your digital camera (in fact, all digital cameras include some digital zoom, so you can't really avoid it), especially if you don't care about using (or don't know how to use) an image editing software. So, as far as digital zoom is concerned, you can do it in camera or you can do it afterwards in an image editing software. Any cropping and enlarging can be done in an image editing software, such as Photoshop.

So, when a digital camera is advertised with 3x digital zoom, no big deal. You can achieve the same 3x (and in fact as much as you want) digital zoom effect in an image editing software. The advantage of doing it later is that you can then decide exactly which portion to crop and how much to enlarge (3x, 4x, ...). If you do it in camera, image quality is irreversibly lost.

Someone in a digital camera forum once mentioned that he uses digital zoom because it might mean the difference between capturing a great shot or not at all. Umm, let's think about this a bit. True, if by zooming digitally in camera you get to see what your subject is doing and thus can capture the shot at the right moment. Not quite true, if it's something like a landscape shot, and the mountains ain't going nowhere fast, because you can achieve the same cropping and enlarging effect after the fact in your image editing software. So, it's really up to you, if you know what you're doing.

What, therefore is the rule of thumb, when it comes to using zoom? Here it is: Always use optical zoom. When buying a camera, choose one that warns you that you are about to use digital zoom or that allows you to disable digital zoom (most do). If you do use digital zoom, use it only if it does not appreciably impact your image quality. If you rarely print past 4x6 in. photos, digital zoom may not adversely affect you.

When comparing cameras, you should always use optical zoom. There is no point in comparing digital zoom with digital zoom or optical zoom with total zoom. Always compare optical zoom with optical zoom.

All in all, optical zoom is much better. Digital zoom is just like zooming in on it on your computer. If it has no optical zoom, don't buy it.

how do you read a lens?




coy5coy


1.

Canon EF-S 17-85MM f4-5.6 IS USM Standard Zoom Lens

can someone please break this down so I can understand how to read this please?


2.

Canon EF-S 17-85MM f4-5.6 IS USM Standard Zoom
Canon EF 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 DO IS USM Telephoto Zoom Lens

why would anyone want a zoom lens that stops at 85MM, isnt the larger the number better the zoom? Wouldnt the 300mm be much better because it zooms in better?



Answer
Canon is the manufacturer of the lens, meaning that the lens will mount onto a Canon body.

The focal length (e.g., "70-300mm) is the field of view that the lens can see. A "Normal" focal length is about 35mm on a consumer Canon DSLR and 50mm on a 35mm SLR. This gives roughly the perspective that we, as people, see. A wider lens can see more of a scene (think really big landscapes), but the perspective is exaggerated and as something gets close to the camera is starts to appear much larger. An example of this is the classic image of a dog poking it's nose towards camera; the nose will look really big while the rest of the dog is small because it's further back. A telephoto lens makes a distant scene look bigger (smaller field of view) and also flattens the picture. Think of a telephoto lens as being like a pair of binoculars and a wide angle lens as being those binoculars turned around backward.

EF stands for "ElectroFocus." This means that it is autofocus and will mount on an EOS camera (Any DSLR, recent 35mm SLR's too). An acronym of EF-S means that the lens will only work on cropped-sensor (aka, APS-C) DSLR's such as the Rebel series (or 300D/350D/400D/450D/1000D) and 10D/20D/30D/40D series. It will mount on any EOS camera, but light will not hit the corners of the image sensor or film on a non-cropped camera, and this will result in a big black circle near the edges of the image.

IS stands for image stabilization. This means that there are mechanisms in the lens that helps reduce the shake caused by hand holding it, which in turn makes it easier to shoot sharp images in low light situations.

USM is an UltraSonic Motor. A USM mechanism is virtually silent, and generally focuses much faster than non-USM glass.

DO means "Diffractive Optics" in Canon jargon, and DO lenses can be identified as having a green ring around the lens body towards the front of the lens. Diffractive Optics is a technology that allows very sharp lenses with virtually no chromatic aberration. These lenses are normally a bit smaller than one would expect for their focal length/speed as DO is used to reduce the need for huge pieces of glass, but these lenses are also very expensive. I've never heard of a bad DO lens.

Zoom, of course, means that the lens can change it's focal length -- zoom in and out. Zooms have generally lower image quality than a comparable fixed or prime lens, that does not zoom. A bigger zoom range does not imply better. As lenses are made to zoom more, they lose image quality because you're trying to make the same glass work for a wide range of focal lengths. Basically, you're making the glass perform at an okay level for any given focal length, but never excel at any given one either. A fixed/prime lens will usually give the best optical quality. After that, a small zoom range (16-30mm) will give the next best quality, then a medium zoom range (18-55mm), and a large zoom range (18-200mm or 70-300mm) will give the least optical quality. This is just a general guideline of course, optical quality varies significantly from lens to lens. The 17-85mm IS lens will be a better option if you had to choose just one lens right now, as it covers the "Normal" range, which is where the majority of your shots will come from. The 70-300 DO is an amazing lens, and would be a great second lens.

The f/# is the maximum aperture of the lens. A smaller number is generally better, as the lens can perform in lower-light situations and can also "Sweet spot" (get to it's best working conditions) at a lower aperture as well. A bigger aperture (lower number) means that there is a bigger hole for light to pass through in the lens, which means more light reaches the sensor in a given time, and thus the sensor can record the image faster than with a lens at a lower f/#.




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Friday, January 31, 2014

all SLR cameras lens i want to understand?




XDXD


i want to know if all SLR brands can be used the same lens or different ones etc. like a Nikon lens on a canon camera or vice visa or other brands
thats A LOT of money you think anyone has made an extra extension to be place on lets say a canon camera and the extension is allowed to have any lens? because that would be very interesting product to buy



Answer
All camera manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount. Canon lenses for Canon, Nikon lenses for Nikon, Sony lenses for Sony, Penax lenses for Pentax, Olympus lenses for Olympus. The exceptions are Samsung and Fuji. Fuji DSLRs are built using a Nikon chassis and lens mount. Samsung DSLRs are built using a Pentax chassis and lens mount. Sony uses the Minolta Maxxum A-mount that dates back to 1985.

There are adapters that allow you to use a Nikon lens on a Canon or a Minolta SR (manual focus) mount lens on a Sony or Canon or Pentax or Olympus. The problem with adapters is that you have to use the lens in stop-down metering and manual focus. (Each camera requires a separate adapter).

The Tamron "Adaptall" adapters use the M42 screw mount on the lens and an adapter designed for each camera body. With it you could have a Pentax body and a Canon body and use the same lens on both cameras.

Minolta SR mount 250mm mirror lenses go for a premium on eBay and the word is they are being retrofitted with a Nikon mount. I've also seen a couple of SR mount lenses that have had the mount modified to mount to the Sony DSLR, supposedly with full metering.

All in all its still best to buy lenses designed for your camera.

Are camera lens fittings all the same?




vivalazhon


i have an old minolta SLR camera with a few different lenses... i want to get a new digital SLR.... are the lens fittings standard, or would i need to buy another minolta?


Answer
All camera manufacturers use a proprietary lens mount. Therefore, a Canon lens will not mount on a Nikon or Olympus or Sony or Pentax body and their lenses will not mount on any other body. There are adapters that allow you to use a Sony lens on a Canon or Olympus but you lose a lot of the features like metering and auto focus. The one exception is the Fujifilm DSLR line which uses a Nikon lens mount.

When Minolta introduced the world's first full-featured Auto Focus 35mm SLR in 1985 they changed their lens mount from the MC/MD bayonet mount to the A-mount. After the Konica-Minolta merger, Sony bought the DSLR technology from K-M and is still using the A-mount.

If your lenses are from the SRT or X series of Minolta cameras (MC/MD bayonet mount) then you will need an adapter to use them on a Sony or Canon or Olympus DSLR. If you have an old Minolta Maxxum then they can be used on any Sony DSLR.




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Sunday, September 15, 2013

What digital SLR camera lens is equivalent to the 35-80mm lens on film SLRs?

best camera lens manufacturers on Canon EOS Rebel XS / 1000D Review
best camera lens manufacturers image



Ali


I am looking for a lens for my Olympus E300 that has the equivalent focal length of my regular SLR's 35-80mm lens.


Answer
That depends entirely on the size of the IMAGE SENSOR and can vary from one manufacturer to another. The easiest way to determine this is to find out what the "crop factor" value is for the model of the camera you want to use. For example a crop factor of 1 would mean that the sensor is exactly the same size as a full frame 35mm camera and the lens would be exactly the same.

For a camera with a 1.5x crop factor the lens would be 34/1.5 or 24mm (rounded up) to 80/1.5 or 54mm so a 1.5x crop factor would need a 24-54mm range.

For a camera with a 2x crop factor it would be 34/2 or 17mm to 80/2 or 40mm so the lens would be 17-40mm.

Smaller sensors allow better power management, smaller & lighter camera and lens construction and improved optical designs for lenses to be used with sensors (for design reasons image sensors need more direct or "straighter" light paths than film). The sensors also generate less heat which may cause image deterioration when a camera is used continuously.

The advantage of larger sensors is that they can have physically larger "pixels" so they are less likely to have a bleed over from adjacent pixels. The bleed causes image deterioration in the form of "noise".

Typical crop factors are in the range from 1.3 - 2.0. Most camera companies use whatever they want but some cameras have adopted a standard called Four/Thirds which has a 2x crop factor.

Hope this helps.
Email if you have more specific questions.

EDIT: Additional info, the Olympus 14-45 "kit" lens is roughly equivalent to a 28-90mm and would be very comparable. I have a lightly used one for sale. If you are interested contact me via email.

How do you know if the coating of a DSLR camera lens deteriorated?




Nicole


I was stupid enough to go through over a year without buying a lens protector.
How would the quality of the photos look like? I'm afraid that some of the coating has already come off. D:



Answer
A camera / lens manufacturer would not be in business for long if the coatings on their lenses just deteriorated away all on it's own. It does not work that way. A lens "protector" type filer, such as a 1A or UV is only there to help prevent lens damage in case of debris hitting the front element of the lens and breaking it.

If you are actually having coating come off your lens, I will say the problem is more likely you, and that you may need a UV filter to protect the lens from YOU and how you are handling the camera.

I much prefer a good lens hood to the UV filter. A hood will also go a long way to preventing flare in your photos.

steve




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Sunday, August 18, 2013

What is the safest way to remove sand from a camera lens?

best camera lens manufacturers on ... Sony >> Sony DSC-RX1/B Cybershot Full-frame Digital Camera cheap sale
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9121


The lens is not removable, and I do not want to scratch it.


Answer
Send the camera in to the manufacturer. Don't mess with it yourself. Your just asking for trouble and heartbreak.

If your sure the sand is just exterior, then use a camels-hair brush. (keep you hands off it, the brush will pick up oils from your skin and render the brush in-effective.)

Is there any way to replace a broken camera with no receipt or warranty from the store?




:)


I had a Samsung L210 10.2 megapixel camera. The lens got stuck and it broke, it doesn't take pictures anymore... And I wanted to know if there was any way to get it replaced without a store warranty or a receipt.... If it's possible....


Answer
Its the camera thats in warranty, if you take it back to where you bought it they should have a record of its serial number and what date it was sold.

This is why its always worth registering new gear on the manufacturers web site it keeps a record independant of any receipts. You don't need the receipt legally (or even to prove ownership).

Chris




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