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-   -   New SLR or new lens? (https://www.worldphotographyforum.com/showthread.php?t=4983)

Alex1994 13-09-09 20:56

New SLR or new lens?
 
Hi everyone

I am currently wanting to expand my 35mm film SLR's potential. I have roughly £160 pounds to blow right now and possibly more in the future. There are two options:

1. A new lens for my Leica R3. The only lens I can afford for the moment is a 35-70mm, which is an excellent lens like all Leica lenses but no huge magnification or very wideangle.

2. Buying an Olympus OM-1 for about 50-80 pounds with lens and spending the rest on a nice new telephoto or wideangle. Does anyone know about the durability and optical quality of the Zuiko lenses? Are Leica lenses significantly better-considering the price as well?

Maybe I should be looking at an entirely different camera?

All feedback appreciated

Alex

yelvertoft 13-09-09 22:26

Alex, you haven't given us any idea of why you are looking to add/change. What do you find you can't do with your current equipment? If you're using Leica stuff, then I don't think it's the technical quality of the kit that's holding back your results.

j8kkb 14-09-09 14:36

Alex I have used Zuiko lenses for about 25 years now and the quality and durability in my opinion is excellent, all I would say is do not buy too cheap as some lenses out there have not been looked after and can suffer from fungal growth in them , but as the previous poster points out if you are using Leica kit its going to be hard to beat.

Alex1994 14-09-09 16:14

Yes, I certainly have no complaints with the quality of the kit, just the versatility; all I have on my R3 is a 50mm lens, and at a stretch the only other lens I can consider is a 35-70. The reason I am tempted by the OM-system is that there are a huge variety of lenses available for decent prices e.g. 28mm, 35-105, 100-200, 180...

miketoll 14-09-09 16:25

My parents had Olympus cameras, OM1 and OM10. and a couple of lenses although I cannot remember what focal lengths. The quality was excellent.

j8kkb 15-09-09 14:48

I have the 28mm f2.8.....standard 50mm f1.8...a very beautiful 85mm f2...and the 135mm f3.5.....great thing about them as well is they all take the same filter 49mm.

Alex1994 15-09-09 22:43

Thanks for the input guys. I snapped up a 35-135mm Carl Zeiss Jenazoom for Olympus OM on eBay for 90 pounds delivered. Obviously that means I'm committing to buying an OM-1 body in the future (ffordes have one for 80 pounds in excellent condition). In the longer run I want a 28mm and 2x converter to make the Zeiss into a 70-270mm.

You say the 85mm f2 Zuiko is good? I may buy that too =)

j8kkb 15-09-09 22:47

make sure the OM1 has been converted from the old mercury batteries or else you will need to use a light meter...also I believe the OM1 is totally manual no aperture priority unlike the OM2

Alex1994 15-09-09 23:01

I believe the correct substitute for the old mercury batteries is the Wein cell 1.35v zinc-air battery, which fills in exactly for the old ones but doesn't last as long.

yelvertoft 16-09-09 10:14

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alex1994 (Post 38890)
In the longer run I want a 28mm and 2x converter to make the Zeiss into a 70-270mm.

I'd say forget the t/con. If you're looking at these kind of lenses (non-digital) that go for not a lot of money, you'll be better off buying a lens that has the kind of range you're looking for without need for a t/con. There used to be plenty of lenses in the 70-210 range for film cameras, though I've never looked at Olympus stuff. A 2x t/con will lose you two stops of light and significantly degrade image quality, especially on an old zoom.

liam_hodgson 16-09-09 11:01

Hi people, I am just wondering if anyone can help me, I have recently taken up pgotography as a hobby and as part for that I am heading off to Kenya very soon to see what sort of pics I can capture over there. At the moment I am using the Nikon D60 camera with a 200mm lens on, I am wondering if anyone knows if Nikon does a 300mm lens that WILL autofocus with the Nikon D60? I would be very greatful is someone can help!!

andy153 16-09-09 11:40

Hi there Liam, welcome to WPF - enjoy the forum. How about the Nikon AF-S 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 VR? That will work very well with your D60. Also there is the TAMRON AF 70-300MM F/4-5.6 DI LD MACRO 1:2 LENS that will work - it has a macro setting also - so one lens may be all you need? Any Nikon lens that is "AF-S" or Sigma that is "HSM" will work on a D60.

liam_hodgson 16-09-09 11:56

Thanks alot for the advice Andy, I will look into those two lenses you suggested. Many Thanks

liam_hodgson 16-09-09 15:03

I have found a Sigma 70-300mm f/4-5.6 "Motorized" DG Macro Telephoto Zoom Lens with Built-in Motor Drive at a decent price and I am just wondering if any1 will know if this will auto focus with Nikon D60, all it says on the description is "works with all Nikons".

Alex1994 16-09-09 16:28

Liam,

welcome to the forum. Please provide us a link to this lens. My guess is that it will indeed focus on your D60, but we're better off checking ;-)

You will also get a lot more replies if you create a topic specific to what you are asking or want to discuss as opposed to posting in another thread. That way it's also less confusing for others reading the forum.

Do post your photos in the gallery once you get back from Kenya!

Alex

Joe 05-11-09 23:48

The letters 'HSM' will be within the title and/or specs of the Sigma lens advert if it truely works AF on all Nikon digi bodies. If it doesn't or the advertiser hasn't put those magical letters in the ad it wont work, they're either deliberately being vague (to sell off old stock on ebay?), or just stupid.

simples


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