by using a wider lens of course.Lunar07 wrote:How can you reconcile these two things?
/matt
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
He's not talking about the COI at the film plane. He is talking about focal length for wide angle shots. Remember, a 25mm Nikon lens would be numbingly expensive, if you can find one, and will only appear as "normal" on the CP16. Probably 28mm is going to be the closest you can get, anyway, in Nikon mount. Anything wider in a Nikon mount is going to cost you a ton of money. If I may make a suggestion, go to a M42 thread conversion, like I did. There are a multitude of cheap, razor sharp Takumar lenses on ebay (which were originally cine lenses anyway) and there are less expensive (but still very sharp) 8mm and 17mm Russian M42 thread mount lenses available. You could buy both of them for less than a Nikon fisheye, which is the only way you'll ever get wide angle with a Nikon on a CP16.discs of tron wrote:i think they may be sending it off to the guy in the uk who does these mods. someone help me with the name...
also, i don't understand the bit about the lens not being wide enough. a nikon bayonet mount is much bigger than a c-mount. not to mention it's designed to cover 35mm film. am i missing something or is this guy full of shit?
Well, I guess "numbingly" is relative. Anything made by Nikon is going to be more expensive than an M42 thread, in my experience.Ian wrote: 24mm is a common focal length for 35mm still cameras and there are plenty of 24mm manual focus Nikkors available on the used market.
They are hardly "numbingly" expensive.
Well, certainly not the specific lenses you put on an old Pentax. That isn't really what I meant. I was simply referring to the quality. According to an old book I have on motion picture equipment history, after WWII, Japan was rebuilding its motion picture industry. Richo (I believe) was given the task of making knock-offs of Mitchell motion picture cameras and Takumar was given the task of making the lenses for them. They took the easiest route for mounting, which was an M42 screw mount. I have some of the early Takumar Cine Lenses and they will fit any M42 camera perfectly. The later Takumar lenses for the Pentax are virtually identical (with some minor physical changes) and I know from the book that the quality of the optics (before the later Asahi bayonet versions) was identical. Very sharp. I was simply trying to point out that using a Takumar as a cine lens was a good choice, based on its history.Ian wrote: I don't believe that the Takumars were originally cine lenses - that just doesn't make sense.
Good point. I wasn't trying to exclude the use of a Peleng or Zenitar in a Nikon mount; only showing that you can get cheap, sharp lenses in 8mm and 16mm M42 mount.Ian wrote:You must mean the 8mm Peleng and the 16mm (not 17mm) Zenitar. The Peleng is almost always sold with an included Nikon mount that you can attach permanently to the lens, effectively making it a Nikon mount lens.