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 Fed 2/50 lens: a coated one???

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 07 2008 : 07:39:26 AM

Hello,

Yesterday, I received one of the last 2/50 produced, as far as I know: the serial # 32649 (to put on my 180xxx S eBerdsk).
I was surprised by the first lens which shows blue/lilac reflects which don't exist on my six other 2/50 Fed lenses, as if this one was single coated.

My question of course, is: is it possible? When?

If yes, it would be important for the understanding of Fed S 1e-s periods of making, as there is a strong correlation between S bodies and 2/50 lenses...

Amitiés. Jacques.
32   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Jacques M. Posted - May 29 2021 : 04:55:16 AM
Hello,

I dig out this thread, years after...
At that time, I had no numerics to try this lens. I have just tested it on my Sony , and here is the result:


http://www.ussrphoto.com/UserContent2/2952021_DSC00683.JPG
(opened at f/9)

I am really surprised and I wonder if this lens was made for a special purpose...

Amitiés. Jacques.



Brian Posted - Jan 05 2013 : 1:31:30 PM
It sounds like the lens has mismatched optics in it. The back-focus on the odd lens is much too short to be useful on a camera.
Jacques M. Posted - Jan 05 2013 : 11:50:08 AM
The time to find out the lens, and to make other comparisons...
I confirm: there is about 20mm difference between the images with this lens and an ordinary 2/50 Fed lens, all parameters being the same.

But it is with the ordinary lens that the formed image is farther...

Brian Posted - Jan 05 2013 : 07:53:47 AM
Before buying a camera- put a white oiece of paper, or cardboard, on a table under a light. Hold the two lenses to form an image of the light on the paper. If you have to hold the mystery lens "about" 20mm farther from the paper to form the image, and the formed images- might work on an SLR.

If you have a mirrorless camera, might work on it.
stephanvdz Posted - Jan 04 2013 : 12:31:56 PM
or may be that the 39reflex standard was not a KMZ invention... it's the same frange distance than the M42... and may be the M40... so...

Stephan
Jacques M. Posted - Jan 04 2013 : 05:33:52 AM

I try to find a M39 Zenit. If not, I will buy one: it's worth trying. It would be crazy: it would mean that Fed was associated to the SLR KMZ work...

Thanks for the idea.
stephanvdz Posted - Jan 03 2013 : 5:08:01 PM
Jacques, did you try it on a zenit 39 ?
It would be very surprising, but why not ...




Stephan
Brian Posted - Jan 03 2013 : 2:30:41 PM
It's hard to say what has been done to lenses over 60 or more years. I bought a pre-war 5cm f1.5 Sonnar that was missing the middle triplet and had a front element of 100mm focal length to make the lens a 50mm overall focal length. It formed an image: but had wild distortions.

The early Nikkor 5cm F1.4 lenses have optics and fixtures that are smaller diameter than those made a year or so into production.

I've bored-out the fixture of a Rigid Summicron to replace the front element with one slightly later.

Hard to tell what's been done.
Jacques M. Posted - Jan 03 2013 : 04:35:52 AM

I will try to examine it more closely.
The change of the front module, why not?

At this point, how can we explain the cover which is 2mm larger?

Jacques.
Brian Posted - Jan 02 2013 : 7:00:00 PM
Looking at the Fed lenses: my first guess is that someone substited a front element, possible from a J-8, for one that was damaged. This will be the wrong focal length and "looks good" but will not focus correctly. I was sent a 1951 J-3 all the way from Russia to look at, likewise it would not form an image. The rear glass was "wrong", someone stuck something in from a Planar just to make the lens complete. The front element and front triplet was perfect, and all went happily into a new optical fixture with a slightly later rear triplet.

On this one: if you can measure the focal length of the front element from the working lens, and the diameter of the lens you might be able to find a good substitute. I was able to replace the rear element missing from a Nikkor 10.5cm F2.5 with one from surplusshack.com. "it worked"
Jacques M. Posted - Sep 23 2008 : 10:56:42 AM

Hi Stephan!
I cannot reverse the front part of the lens as it is too curved. Really, I don't know on which body it could work...

Amitiés. Jacques.

stephanvdz Posted - Sep 22 2008 : 5:05:08 PM
no news... have you lost hope or is this thing really not working ?

Stephan
stephanvdz Posted - Aug 19 2008 : 4:39:26 PM
may be you should try to put the front lens the other way... reverse it...

Stephan
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 18 2008 : 11:58:31 AM


With exactly the same method, I obtain an ordinary c.29mm with another 2/50 mm Fed lens.
Perhaps a specialist in optic could tell us more

Amitiés. Jacques.
stephanvdz Posted - Aug 18 2008 : 10:20:06 AM
that's bizarre...

bizarre, j'ai dit bizarre... comme c'est étrange

Stephan
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 17 2008 : 10:43:57 AM
Hi Stephan,

Yes, there is an image which occurs at about 12/13 mm from the interior part of the flange.
I cannot be more precise for the moment.

Amitiés. Jacques.
stephanvdz Posted - Aug 15 2008 : 11:14:55 AM
Jacques

Could you see if it creates an image, and how far from the flange... ?

Stephan
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 14 2008 : 10:29:43 PM

Hi Luiz,
I don't see any difference with what I said...
Probably my english!

Jacques.
Luiz Paracampo Posted - Aug 14 2008 : 6:21:53 PM
Jacques
Repeating Stephan words........."a collapsible sonnar head on a FED 50/2 barrel"..........
LP
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 13 2008 : 03:16:43 AM

It's what I think, too.
And the number gives 1941 as the date of making: not bad for an 1e...

Jacques.
stephanvdz Posted - Aug 12 2008 : 5:35:13 PM
no it's a collapsible sonnar head on a fed 50/2 barrel, "easy" modification



Stephan
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 12 2008 : 09:02:38 AM

Hello Luiz,

You mean that Asquini's lens would be a Summar reingraved Sonnar with a Fed mount?

Jacques.
Luiz Paracampo Posted - Aug 12 2008 : 06:52:22 AM
It seems a real Sonnar with the mounting of a Fed lens...
This camera is dated from 1948. Surprising!

Amitiés. Jacques.


------------------------------------------------------------

A Sonnar (Zeiss) lens formula will never fit in such barrel !
This is a Real SUMMAR (Leitz) formula lens.

Regards
LP
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 11 2008 : 10:03:05 AM
Thanks, Bill.

I'll try to have this lens optically analysed after the holidays.
Why not this lens for a fotosniper effectively: the dates and the history of Fed would fit.

For Claudio Asquini's lens:
http://www.geocities.com/RodeoDrive/8595/chilavist.html
It seems a real Sonnar with the mounting of a Fed lens...
This camera is dated from 1948. Surprising!

Amitiés. Jacques.


nightphoto Posted - Aug 09 2008 : 2:32:49 PM
Hi Jacques,
No, unfortunately I don't have a passport. I think it is original because I bought it here in the United States from a Russian man who was not a dealer, and he told me that it had been his father's only camera and bought near WWII. So this is why I think it.
Yes, my lens has the thinner ring on the front like your uncoated example. It does seem that your coated lens has a thicker ring and must have been made by the factory.

I don't know why this was done or what camera it could fit on, unless the lens was made to fit onto a reflex housing device that would be mounted to the FED rangefinder (sort of like the FS-2 fotosniper from WWII).

Also, I have noticed that the only other serial number as high as your lens, on our WIKI list of FED-S cameras, is the last one on the list, which is a little higher, and is owned by Claudio Asquini and he calls it a "Sonnar"! So maybe this is clue?

Regards, Bill

Jacques M. Posted - Aug 09 2008 : 07:52:00 AM

It has worked!
So, one picture more which shows the faint coating of the left lens and the convergence of its very first lens (the diaphragms are wide open on the two!!).

Jacques.
http://www.ussrphoto.com/UserContent/fed objectif 003.jpg

Jacques M. Posted - Aug 09 2008 : 07:33:14 AM

http://www.ussrphoto.com/UserContent/Fed 250 lenses 004.jpg

Well, here are the two lenses I speak of.
Jacques.
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 09 2008 : 07:26:34 AM
Hi!
Sorry for this serial film!

As the ring cannot be completely screwed to secure the very first lens, there are two millimeters which protrude. And the screwing aluminium cover is exactly 2 millimeters larger than the ordinary one to enclose all that. The work is perfect. I try to join a picture.

So that is hardly noticeable that the lens 32649 is very slightly larger than the 27957.

All that makes me think this lens was made by the factory. But when? And above all , why?
If you have ideas...

Amitiés. Jacques.
Bill, you say your "couple" 179348/29484 is original. Interesting! Do you have a passport or something?
Jacques M. Posted - Aug 08 2008 : 11:08:48 AM

Hello,

I have just partially dismantled that lens and compared it with another 2/50 lens I own: the n° 27957.

The two rear units are identical: same aspect, same convergence.
It's not the case of the front part. The 32649 is globally much more convergent. The very front lens seems more curved and thicker (I took it away), so that the ring cannot be screwed completely in the barrel to fix this lens. It's this first unit which is coated.

Of course, impossible to take pictures with this lens mounted on a Fed S or any LTM. Perhaps the work of a handyman to sell its lens? Or a trial of the factory for an hypothetic 39mm small format in 1941 or after WW2...?

Amitiés . Jacques.
nightphoto Posted - Aug 08 2008 : 10:29:31 AM
Hi Jacques,

Maybe when it was dismantled and reassembled, the front element or element group was replaced with a coated element or group. Maybe that is why it was dismantled ... because the front element was damaged.

I have a FED-S Berdsk # 179348 and it has the original lens # 29484. The lens is not coated.

Bill

Regards, Bill

Jacques M. Posted - Aug 07 2008 : 3:13:14 PM
Hi all (and Stephan!)

No doubt this is a Fed lens!

I checked its optical possibilities: it is completely out on the complete range, as Stephan says. It's easy to compare roughly two identical lenses. This one was certainly dismantled to be repaired, and the different optic groups of lenses were badly re-mounted.

All that doesn't explain the apparent coated lens... To my mind, it's the point which could be interesting. And the specialized books don't give any explanation.

Amitiés. Jacques.
stephanvdz Posted - Aug 07 2008 : 11:21:51 AM
I didn't coated it... I swear... perhaps it came because it was hidden in my collection of T lenses ;-)

seriously I never remarked that... and it came on my FED S number 107723 but someone has mixed the lenses

Note that for me that lens was unusable, because it's out of focus in the all range...

Good luck at finding wat is wrong...

Wat if it was not a fed lens ?

Stephan

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