Redrock Macro adapter on SurplusShed
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Redrock Macro adapter on SurplusShed
Has anyone tried one of these? They are on half-price sale til Thurs...
https://www.surplusshed.com/pages/item/PL1297.html
https://www.surplusshed.com/pages/item/PL1297.html
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- Posts: 3439
- Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 10:40 am
- Location: Santa Clara, CA, USA
- Contact:
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- Posts: 3439
- Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2010 10:40 am
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Assume you saw this Ray................
https://www.provideocoalition.com/get-a ... acro-lens/
BR
John
https://www.provideocoalition.com/get-a ... acro-lens/
BR
John
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I did not see that review, thanks for posting...Raydolmadis wrote:Assume you saw this Ray................
https://www.provideocoalition.com/get-a ... acro-lens/
BR
John
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I've ordered one. I'm hoping it might be a cheaper Raynox susbstitute I can use on my 55-300 zoom for those occasions I don't want to carry an actual macro lens with me. I'm very curious to see what everyone here does with this, too. It's good to have multiple ways to do the same or similar things as not all set-ups are going to be eqwually useful in all circumstances. (It's also fun to play with interesting combinations of bits and pieces to see whnat they do!)
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UPDATE 1
My Surplus Shed order arrived a couple of days ago. This thing is big and heavy, glass and metal, about the size of of a hockey puck. Hanging this much weight off the front of some lenses (as is my intended use) may be problematic. I can imagine some lightweight, modern, plasticky zooms protesting this added burden. It could possibly overtax the autofocus on non-IF lenses where the front elements extend from the main lens body. Not that I'm going to use AF with this achromat, but you have been warned.
A very quick hand held test on my Pentax DA 55-300 4-5.8 ED led me to conclude that this will work better reversed. Screwed in the normal way, the image in the viewfinder is quite foggy looking, like I'm shooting through a haze or diffusion filter. Not the look I was after. I made a 72mm lens coupler by epoxying two 55-72 step-down rings so that each end of the assembly has male 72mm threads, allowing me to mount the achromat on the 55-300 like a reversed SLR lens. A quick look through the viewfinder once the achromat was threaded onto my DIY coupler confirmed the huge improvement in clarity with the Redrock reverse mounted. (I had encountered a similar difference in performance with experiments I conducted using a scavanged binocular objective mounted on the same 55-300 in an attempt to cobble together a cheap Raynox alternative; one direction produced a very soft, foggy image. Reversing this optic avoided the fogginess.) Having had this prior experience with earlier lens play, I hoped that the Redrock Achromat would respond in a similar fashion to being mounted in reverse. It did. YAY! This purchase looks like it's going to be money well spent. Thank you Ray Parhurst for bringing this item to our attention! I'm curious to see how others use it in their own set-ups, as a tube lens or whatever.
Once I've had a chance to actually shoot with it, I'll post photos. If this works as well as I think (and hope) it might, I'm going to be very pleased, as it will make a great accessory to carry along when I don't necessarily want to haul both the 55-300 (when I'm out shooting larger creatures from a distance) and a dedicated macro. It should make a nice auxiliary for my 16-85, too. Stay tuned...
My Surplus Shed order arrived a couple of days ago. This thing is big and heavy, glass and metal, about the size of of a hockey puck. Hanging this much weight off the front of some lenses (as is my intended use) may be problematic. I can imagine some lightweight, modern, plasticky zooms protesting this added burden. It could possibly overtax the autofocus on non-IF lenses where the front elements extend from the main lens body. Not that I'm going to use AF with this achromat, but you have been warned.
A very quick hand held test on my Pentax DA 55-300 4-5.8 ED led me to conclude that this will work better reversed. Screwed in the normal way, the image in the viewfinder is quite foggy looking, like I'm shooting through a haze or diffusion filter. Not the look I was after. I made a 72mm lens coupler by epoxying two 55-72 step-down rings so that each end of the assembly has male 72mm threads, allowing me to mount the achromat on the 55-300 like a reversed SLR lens. A quick look through the viewfinder once the achromat was threaded onto my DIY coupler confirmed the huge improvement in clarity with the Redrock reverse mounted. (I had encountered a similar difference in performance with experiments I conducted using a scavanged binocular objective mounted on the same 55-300 in an attempt to cobble together a cheap Raynox alternative; one direction produced a very soft, foggy image. Reversing this optic avoided the fogginess.) Having had this prior experience with earlier lens play, I hoped that the Redrock Achromat would respond in a similar fashion to being mounted in reverse. It did. YAY! This purchase looks like it's going to be money well spent. Thank you Ray Parhurst for bringing this item to our attention! I'm curious to see how others use it in their own set-ups, as a tube lens or whatever.
Once I've had a chance to actually shoot with it, I'll post photos. If this works as well as I think (and hope) it might, I'm going to be very pleased, as it will make a great accessory to carry along when I don't necessarily want to haul both the 55-300 (when I'm out shooting larger creatures from a distance) and a dedicated macro. It should make a nice auxiliary for my 16-85, too. Stay tuned...
I just received my Surplus Shed order. Some quick initial impressions:
- the weight is 191 grams for the achromat, just for the mounted lens, not including the nice screw in metal front and rear caps
- the glass can easily be removed or flipped inside the 72mm barrel by unscrewing the retaining ring, no need for reverse mounting rings
- it is a two element achromat
I ordered a couple of these lenses as buying a single one would be uneconomical because of the relatively high shipping and import charges. If anyone in the EU is looking for one let me know.
- the weight is 191 grams for the achromat, just for the mounted lens, not including the nice screw in metal front and rear caps
- the glass can easily be removed or flipped inside the 72mm barrel by unscrewing the retaining ring, no need for reverse mounting rings
- it is a two element achromat
I ordered a couple of these lenses as buying a single one would be uneconomical because of the relatively high shipping and import charges. If anyone in the EU is looking for one let me know.
Surplusshed described it as being a cemented doublet so anything other than two elements would have surprised me.Lou Jost wrote:Dick, that's good info, sorry to hear there are only two elements.
Anyway, a quick test with this lens as a tube lens looks good, I'll post some results when I feel more confident that the differences I see are due to the optics used and not just random mistakes on my part.