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Archive 2008 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8

  
 
Mark Kenfield
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p.2 #1 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8


Elan II wrote:
Ahhh, I see your point. The lens you got is probably more of a portrait lens anyway. I was inspired by your use of it with my suggestion. But if macro use is of interest, a cheap set of tubes will do the job just fine. A vintage, non-AI set can be had for all of $20 on ebay. I know a lot of folks think that you need the AI version to get metering and TTL flash, but that's not the case. Just set the aperture where you want it, enter the same data in the non-CPU setting
...Show more

I'm definitely going to look into picking up a cheap set of tubes, the lens gets very sharp around f/8-f/11 (so it should work out pretty well if metering and TTL are still going to work).

Thanks for all the info Elan - learnt a lot from this thread.



Mar 29, 2008 at 10:21 PM
Mark Kenfield
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p.2 #2 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8


NightOwl Cat wrote:
And Mark, that's a heck of a stack of filters there,


That's why I got so excited when I realised the lens had 55mm threads!



Mar 29, 2008 at 10:22 PM
NightOwl Cat
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p.2 #3 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8


Elan, The filter size on the 28 is 58mm, the 200 is 67mm. A collage of shots of different angles on them if it helps:

http://i150.photobucket.com/albums/s114/nightowl_cat/fred_miranda/vivitar/vivitars.jpg



Mar 29, 2008 at 10:58 PM
Elan II
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p.2 #4 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8


Mark, you're welcome.


NightOwl Cat, these pics are really helpful. Looks like I was off by a full era here. What you have there are TX/T4 mount lenses, a generation of lenses that preceded the more notorious Series 1. These had an interchangeable mount similar to the Tamron Adaptall system. With it, you can have one lens fit many different brands of SLR cameras by simply changing the inexpensive mount. Of course prevailing brand loyalty made these less useful that they might have otherwise been.

Your mount I think is the older T4, but the lenses are likely from the TX series. According to Rick Olson's excellent site, you can use a T4 mount on a TX lens, but not the other way around. The reason I think these are from the TX series is that they closely match the ones released along with the full series in 1976. The entire TX release was made by Tokina!

The history of the TX series is a subject of ongoing debate at a small manual focus forum I participate in. One member remembered that there was a test of the series by Modern Photography magazine in 1979 that gave them high acclamation, but no record of the article could be found on the web. Another member then bought a set of the 1979 issues on ebay, but when they arrived, the article was not in any of them. Finally, yet another member went to his main city library where they have 40 years of Modern Photography issues available. He found the article in the April 1976 issue. From the article we learned that the TX line was not a revamp of the T4 line, but rather an entire new release. The lenses tested, primes in the 24-200mm range, all scored well. Presumably on optical bench tests.

Several members have the 200/3.5 and the feedback is very good. I suspect the 24/2.8 is just as good, but more prone to flare. Your mount is non-AI. It's difficult to tell from the pic, but if the outer sleeve of the mount doesn't protrude beyond the rear (camera side) face of the mount, then it is safe to CAREFULLY mount it on your D300 to see if it mounts freely and without friction. There is no aperture release linkage with these, so you'll have to compose and then stop-down. Set the non-CPU data to what you're planning to stop down to. Don't assume that stopping down automatically nets more sharpness and contrast though. Read this excerpt from a Robert Monaghan article about 3rd party lenses, especially the last paragraph.


To my mind, the T-4 and TX series are more interesting third party lenses, precisely because you can use them on a variety of camera bodies simply by using the appropriate adapter. Consumer quality lenses in the 28mm to 300mm range were no great optical design challenge by the 1980s. So you can expect these lenses to perform reasonably well, although less brilliantly than their Series I cousins, especially when used wide open.

Still, these interchangeable T-4 and TX mount lenses are even less liked by today's consumers, so you can often buy them for as little as $25 US or even
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Edited on Mar 30, 2008 at 08:33 AM



Mar 30, 2008 at 08:18 AM
NightOwl Cat
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p.2 #5 · Vivitar 135mm f/2.8


Thanks Elan for all that info, now my curiosity is really up on these lenses, and funny thing, I acquired them in my first deal here on FM, they were added in as a bonus. They do work on my D1h, no D300 here, yet... I'll have to give them a serious whirl one weekend.


Mar 30, 2008 at 09:58 AM
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