What is the widest MF/LF lens?
/forum/topic/792395/0

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Yakim Peled
Registered: Nov 18, 2004
Total Posts: 15291
Country: Israel

Requirements:
Excellent IQ (including very good flare resistance).
Rectilinear design.
Should be able to mount on M645 (adapters are O.K.).
Manual focus and manual aperture are a must.
Reasonable price (bar is not established yet).

Backround:
I have a Mirex TS adapter for M645 lens to EOS. I am considering the M645 35/3.5 which is ~21mm in FF terms. I know it is the widest M645 lens but I know nothing about other lenses e.g. Hasselblad. Therefore, before buying it I wish to make sure that it is the right choice for me.

TIA.

Happy shooting,
Yakim.



jcolwell
Registered: Feb 10, 2005
Total Posts: 10643
Country: Canada

Hi Yakim,

AFAIK, the widest rectilinear (i.e. not fisheye), manual focus, medium format lenses are the 35mm f/3.5 645 lenses from Mamiya and Pentax, and then the 40mm f/4 6x6 lenses from Hasselblad (Distagon) and Schneider-Kreuznach (Curtagon). There is a relatively new autofocus Mamiya 645 28mm f/4.5 lens, but it lists at $5700 US, and so it's not on most people's Mirex list.

I highly recommend the Mamiya M645 C 35mm f/3.5 N. Mark Husband's tests suggest that the Pentax-FA 645 35mm f/3.5 is the best in class. Regardless, the Mamiya C 35/3.5N is a damn fine piece of glass.

Jim



Yakim Peled
Registered: Nov 18, 2004
Total Posts: 15291
Country: Israel

1. Can the Pentax 35/3.5 be mounted on my Mirex adapter via another adapter?
2. Are there any Pentax 35/3.5 variations?
3. In which cases am I suppose to see IQ difference between the Pentax and M645? Please note that flare resistance is extremely important to me.

Happy shooting,
Yakim.




AhamB
Registered: Jul 11, 2008
Total Posts: 3298
Country: Germany

I think hubsand's test pointed out that there's a difference in corner sharpness, to the advantage of the Pentax.



rhameed
Registered: Apr 20, 2006
Total Posts: 303
Country: N/A

Yakim Peled wrote:
I am considering the M645 35/3.5 which is ~21mm in FF terms.


I hope you realize that the FF equivalence has no meaning in this case and this would behave like a 35mm lens even on your FF camera.



JohnJ
Registered: Jul 09, 2005
Total Posts: 1445
Country: Australia

I've seen some large B+W prints from a 38mm Biogon Hasselblad shot on Kodak Tech Pan film. I don't think I've ever seen their equal in terms of sharpness, resolution and tonal gradation. There's a reason Hasselblad made dedicated wide angle bodies such as the 903SCW and that they still command the astronomical prices that they do! Of course their relevance to this digital world may be questionable but if sheer image quality is the key criteria then they still have a place.

JJ



ovredal73
Registered: Jun 21, 2005
Total Posts: 2476
Country: Norway

rhameed wrote:
Yakim Peled wrote:
I am considering the M645 35/3.5 which is ~21mm in FF terms.


I hope you realize that the FF equivalence has no meaning in this case and this would behave like a 35mm lens even on your FF camera.


??
I guess he means that the field of view will be equivalent to 21mm on FF/35mm... I am pretty confident Yakim knows how all this works...



rhameed
Registered: Apr 20, 2006
Total Posts: 303
Country: N/A

ovredal73 wrote:
??
I guess he means that the field of view will be equivalent to 21mm on FF/35mm... I am pretty confident Yakim knows how all this works...


Sure sure, I am sure he would know all this - just wanted to make sure - he seems to be planning to use it on an EOS body through an adapter so mentioning the MF FOV made me suspicious



SoundHound
Registered: Jan 14, 2006
Total Posts: 4810
Country: United States

The 43mm F4.0 mounted on the Mamiya 7 (6x7cm) is at least as wide as the 38mm on the SWC and has a fine reputation.



davenfl
Registered: Jun 29, 2008
Total Posts: 3712
Country: United States

I know this has not been mentioned but I got a bunch of adapters to mount the surprisingly excellent lenses I had for my old Kiev 645 on my EOS cameras. There is a MIR 20mm F3.5 (non fisheye) available with an EOS adapter. I also use the ARSAT 30mm f3.5 fisheye which really is out of this world. They are available a lot of places but here is a Canadian company that has been a very good source.

http://www.kremlinoptics.com/catalog/canon_eos_lenses.html

Dave



Yakim Peled
Registered: Nov 18, 2004
Total Posts: 15291
Country: Israel

ovredal73 wrote:
rhameed wrote:
Yakim Peled wrote:
I am considering the M645 35/3.5 which is ~21mm in FF terms.


I hope you realize that the FF equivalence has no meaning in this case and this would behave like a 35mm lens even on your FF camera.


??
I guess he means that the field of view will be equivalent to 21mm on FF/35mm... I am pretty confident Yakim knows how all this works...


Poor phrasing on my part. Sorry.

Happy shooting,
Yakim.



plastic_lens
Registered: Apr 19, 2004
Total Posts: 136
Country: United States

Kowa also made a very fine 35mm f4.5 rectilinear lens for their Kowa 6 series. I still have a Kowa 6MM with the 85 and 150. They are excellent. The 35 is very rare, and goes for a lot when it comes up for auction.

R.J.



Yakim Peled
Registered: Nov 18, 2004
Total Posts: 15291
Country: Israel

plastic_lens wrote:
Kowa also made a very fine 35mm f4.5 rectilinear lens for their Kowa 6 series. I still have a Kowa 6MM with the 85 and 150. They are excellent. The 35 is very rare, and goes for a lot when it comes up for auction.

R.J.


What? A 6mm lens? Details, man, details.

Happy shooting,
Yakim.



Yakim Peled
Registered: Nov 18, 2004
Total Posts: 15291
Country: Israel

Google search indicates that Kowa 6mm is a camera, not a lens. Am I right?

Happy shooting,
Yakim.



Jos Tesseract
Registered: May 28, 2009
Total Posts: 611
Country: Canada

yeah, the 6MM is a funky Kowa 6 with MLU and the ability to take mulitple exposure shots.



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