rebel, will this fit on a Canon XL-H1 or an XH-A1? Very interested if it can fit one of these without having to find additional adaptors.
Actually, to be frank with you, I've only tried this on the Sony HC1 and Z1 because I only have access to these cameras. But I do know from the M2 website/forums that it is possible with both the XL-H1 and XH-A1.
I have the shims to do the adjustment accordingly, but you will have to consult other users on how to optimise it to your system, which frankly is not difficult at all.
Also note that I tried the 72mm and the 55mm achromatic lens, and I found, to my surprise that the 55mm had less chromatic aberration and a larger sweet spot. So now I only have the 55mm which I use on my Sony Z1 and HC1. I think forum members in the M2 site have noted this effect as well.
I will post some images that I've gotten with this system so far once I capture some screen shots.
I have output footage from this system to film for the feature which was selected for Cannes this year under the Un Certain Regard section, and frankly, maybe it's because it's the HDV camera I was using rather than the M2, but I felt that using the adaptor made it too soft for my liking, except maybe for one scene or two scenes. Then again, I'm very critical when things go soft on the bigscreen. However, for the digibeta and other formats like HDV, HD, DV and DVD, it looks great and really takes away the cheap video look.
Again, I will post images to show tomorrow to illustrate what I mean. However, you can look at the M2 website and youtube is replete with examples to show what M2 can do quite easily. I know another local filmmaker Gavin Lim from voiddeck films that has used this quite intensively on his shorts using a system that is similar to mine. Do a google and I think you can see clips of his stuff.
I do recommend that if you have the cash to buy this system from Redrock. I found it very useful on my productions, and help to cut cost esp. when clients want the prime lens look, yet have no budget, so they are pleasantly surprised when they see something that has quality and looks expensive. If not you can always rent from me to try it out and see whether it is worth your investment. There is the PS Technik Pro and Mini which you can rent from Cinegear in Tessensohn Rd, but they cost 1.2K and 700 per day respectively and need way more lights. I haven't used them, but I heard Gone SHopping used that system extensively and it looked great on that film.
Hope this helps!