The brain is what makes the correction. Next time you're out by a tall building, glance up and verify that the top looks closer together than the bottom, then notice that unless you really concentrate on it, the building does not look like it's falling away from you. So, the eye sees what the camera does, but the brain imposes reality on the result.
Tried this on my 45 PC-E. the electrical strips are not long enough on this lens.
Anybody tried on the 24 PC-E? And how's that lens in general? I understand that the mechanics are just as sloppy, but should be fine if you lock it down for every picture. Any coments?
PPop wrote:
Tried this on my 45 PC-E. the electrical strips are not long enough on this lens.
Anybody tried on the 24 PC-E? And how's that lens in general? I understand that the mechanics are just as sloppy, but should be fine if you lock it down for every picture. Any coments?
The OP mentioned cutting the tape that makes the electrical ribbon strips shorter. Is that the case for you?
85PC D unscrew cut tape and rotate
24PC-E unscrew and rotate that's all
45PC-E too short
85PC-E too short need nikon cable replacement which they won't sell as part you need to send your lens in