Nikkor AF DX 10.5mm f/2.8 ED Fisheye Lense


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Andy Ho said:
It is a full frame fish eye to replace the 16mm for use on Nikon DX digital cameras so that you get a full fish eye effect.

Andy Ho


gee, it's making me more excited...
 

Hi

What happen when u fix the 10.5 DX lens on normal SLR?
wat the effect?
 

scanman said:
Hi

What happen when u fix the 10.5 DX lens on normal SLR?
wat the effect?
You get vignetting on your pictures (circular shadows on the edge) for the image circle projected by this lens is smaller than that from of a normal lens. This is to cater to DSLR users who does not have the ability to achieve full frame fish eye due to the 1.5 times manification factor caused by the smaller sensor as compared to film.

Andy Ho
 

Andy Ho said:
You get vignetting on your pictures (circular shadows on the edge) for the image circle projected by this lens is smaller than that from of a normal lens. This is to cater to DSLR users who does not have the ability to achieve full frame fish eye due to the 1.5 times manification factor caused by the smaller sensor as compared to film.

Andy Ho

Vignetting is, of course, quite irritating. But the hilarious images you see in the viewfinder... remember that bunch of adverts with a dog whose nose is really inflated looking?

Try to imagine it being much more distorted.
 

VincentLin said:
Vignetting is, of course, quite irritating. But the hilarious images you see in the viewfinder... remember that bunch of adverts with a dog whose nose is really inflated looking?

Try to imagine it being much more distorted.
:bigeyes: :bigeyes: :bigeyes:
 

one question..
if i m using a non digital nikon lens let say 50mm f2.0
if it fitted on D100 it will become 75mm rt? how abt the F stop?
will it change too?

thanks
 

scanman said:
one question..
if i m using a non digital nikon lens let say 50mm f2.0
if it fitted on D100 it will become 75mm rt? how abt the F stop?
will it change too?

thanks

ur F wouldn't change. the imaging sensor just does a crop - that's why u get a magnification factor.

experts... please elaborate. I'm no digital junkie.
 

ic ic ... i m worried that it might lose out on the f stop.

BTW... a digital camera when using a conventional flash gun say SB 28 wont have the TTL function rt?
 

scanman said:
one question..
if i m using a non digital nikon lens let say 50mm f2.0
if it fitted on D100 it will become 75mm rt? how abt the F stop?
will it change too?

thanks

While the F-stop stays the same, the effective DOF on DSLR for the same FOV as on 135 (35mm) format is deeper. That means it's harder to get nice out of focus background... :hung:

(Note: The effective DOF is affected by the cropping of the smaller CCD size and that we move further away from the subject to maintain the same FOV. http://dfleming.ameranet.com/dof_dslr.html has a good article on it. http://www.photo.net/learn/optics/dofdigital/ has a more technical, but somewhat confusing, article.)
 

scanman said:
ic ic ... i m worried that it might lose out on the f stop.

BTW... a digital camera when using a conventional flash gun say SB 28 wont have the TTL function rt?

Tranditional TTL flash won't work on DSLR. (Manual mode works though.)

Reason: The TTL flash metering is performed by measuring the light reflected from the film surface *when* the shutter curtain is opened. The body cuts off the flash when its meter says enough light is collected. CCD got some nastily reflection property that rules out this approach.

Newer "DX" flashes perform "psuedo TTL": they use pre-flashes to meter and calculate the required outuput *before* the shutter curtain is opened. (Yes, this is similar to the auto fill-in monitor pre-flash.) The downside of doing this is if it is a fast-moving subject, the reading can be wrong.
 

ic ic...

so those old Metz flash gun cant be used on DSLR even if i change the adapter. rt?
 

excellent wideview lens! got mine last weekend from john 3:16.
 

scanman said:
ic ic...

so those old Metz flash gun cant be used on DSLR even if i change the adapter. rt?

Not all DSLR cant ttl... S2Pro can :thumbsup:
 

bearycute said:
Not all DSLR cant ttl... S2Pro can :thumbsup:

Yes, bearycute is right! Fuji S2Pro can do TTL with "classic" non-DX flashes, even with AIS lenses. Amazing! (How do they do it? :think: )
 

johnyu said:
Yes, bearycute is right! Fuji S2Pro can do TTL with "classic" non-DX flashes, even with AIS lenses. Amazing! (How do they do it? :think: )

Yes it can. Dunno how far it's true, but I heard from some S2 Pro users that the TTL on the S2 Pro isn't accurate. And read somewhere the S2 Pro TTL works only up to 400, dunno what will happen at ISO 800 though.

Then again, D-TTL on D100 is also very erratic...

Regards
CK
 

scanman said:
Hi

What happen when u fix the 10.5 DX lens on normal SLR?
wat the effect?
actually, at the CS-Nikon outing, someone mounted this little baby (the DX fisheye) on a film camera. the vignetting isn't circular, it's this weird rectangular shape. hard to describe though... guess when it's avail someone will post up a sample pix.
 

ckiang said:
Yes it can. Dunno how far it's true, but I heard from some S2 Pro users that the TTL on the S2 Pro isn't accurate. And read somewhere the S2 Pro TTL works only up to 400, dunno what will happen at ISO 800 though.

Then again, D-TTL on D100 is also very erratic...

Regards
CK



Is it mention anywhere that normal flash could be used on S2
using normal TTL function?
 

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