This stops the lens focusing at infinity and will also allow it to focus a little closer. Thus, mounting a Canon lens on a Nikon body doesn't work so well. The mirrorless cameras already have a lot of extra space to spare, so the adapters have room to fit. Novoflex has managed to get this ring thin enough not to cause focus problems. As G-series lenses are controlled entirely by electronics in the camera body, they need this extra to work on a Canon camera. And so, Novoflex and have created high-quality adapters that allow you, the user, to regain click-less manual aperture control for Nikon G lenses on Canon EOS bodies.
There are a few catches to this arrangement, however. Nikon F lenses are very easy to adapt with cheap metal mounting rings, but G-type lenses require more precise and expensive!
But both will produce excellent results on any Canon EOS camera. Get expert filmmaking and photography tips delivered to your inbox, and become a better creative. Javascript is disabled in your browser ShareGrid does not work properly without javascript. None of these are correct. A nikon expert rated many lenses on naturfotograf. As described these lenses should be OK on Canon with adapter.
As you wrote here, only the wide angle lenses have problem hitting the mirror. But I am looking for telephoto type. No normal wide angle from Nikon will hit the mirror. Only 2 exceptions or so, which were designed for mirror lock up use on Nikon SLRs in the 70's.
That's not true, as an example, my Pre-AI Nikkor. You need to do a few careful tests to confirm that the image paths are all equal, the path from the lens to sensor must be equal to the lens to focus screen, and the lens to AF chip. Any discrepancy and manual focus will be a pain in the butt, problem is, that AF has made the focus screen less important, it's now optimized for brightness, not focusing accurately, they used to shim them very accurately, not any more, a focus screen can be "In Spec" yet you will miss focus on the eyes with a fast lens.
What is your focusing method for IR shooting? Just want to confirm that you are using the IR mark correctly, that you focus on your subject, take note of the focus distance then align that distance with the IR mark. Looking at the back of that lens, there is nothing out the the ordinary about it.
Was that with the original 5D, perhaps? I also don't know what the correct word is, but he's referring to the black metal parts protruding furthest from the lens mount. These serve to protect the rear lens element when the lens is placed on a table without lens cap on.
With many lenses, these metal parts extend 10 mm or less from the mount flange and would not pose a problem. There are a few lenses where the length is greater, consequently they may interfere with mounting on some adapters or converters. The 35mm f2. Yet it clears the EOS 6D's mirror just fine. Hence my question, what that on the original 5D?
To answer this question. Most of my lenses focus well enough in IR. I had to micro adjust them with in camera Auto Focus Micro Adjustment. They seem to focus well enough that there is no need to manually turn to IR mark. The problem is that most lenses look muddy or with hot spots because most of today's lenses have multi-coating that distract infrared light.
That is what I understood from reading forums. Dialing to IR mark while shooting is quite time consuming and not always accurate. It will work on stills and landscapes but not for animals and people. I am interested in buying Nikkor mm f2.
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