Setting Up Camera Adapters Tutorial |
| Wednesday, 10 March 2010 13:33 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Two men, one bored afternoon, a steel ring, a rubber glove and some washing up liquid?! I’m f*&king out of here! No, you have it all wrong, welcome to my tutorial on adapting manual focus lenses for digital cameras. Learn to adapt and test alternative lenses, bring manual focus lenses in the digital age. Get unsurpassable optical results from older optics by following this step by step tutorial.
Undying Love.... One of the questions I often receive after proclaiming my undying love for adapted lenses onto my Canon bodies, is how on earth do you set them up so they can perform properly? ‘My lens is soft, this alternative lenses stuff is rubbish’.... Its very true to say there are many alternative lens users out there shooting their precious collection very happily without even realising that adapters are not aligned, infinity point is out or worse still that the adapter was not manufactured correctly. This article will hopefully add some much needed information about an unwritten subject, to get that excellent alternative glass performing at 110%. All you need is a few household items and an eye for image scrutiny. Of all the adapters I have set up over the last year and a half of experimenting with alternative lenses, there has been only one occasion where the adapter has worked perfectly without needing some level of adjustment. It was the really expensive one, right? Wrong, it was one I bought for £15 from Ebay. You may be surprised to learn that all the expensive ones I have set up for friends have also required some tinkering, but I am fairly sure this is down to the lens slowly going out of calibration, rather than the adapter itself always being 100% at fault. Herein lies the problem with expensive adapters, is there really any point in spending £140 if it has to be altered to suit your lens? Well, the answer is still perhaps ‘yes’. You are paying for manufacturing precision, consistancy, high tolerances and quality, but it doesnt guarantee a perfect result I am afraid to say. For that, you have to get more involved.
OK rather than get too bogged down with the physics of it all, lets look at some common problems with adapters and how to get around them. The principle of this tutorial is to get infinity focus exactly where it is marked on the lens so the lens can perform as it was designed. Just like fine tuning a carburettor, a quality lens will reveal staggering performance, corner to corner, when set correctly, but there are few problems to overcome. The task is to optimise the lens and adapter so they work together with utter precision.
Jewellery, Jewellery Enter David Jackman, a Contax shooter with an enviable collection of superb Contax Zeiss glass. David was about to sell his entire collection and his beloved Contax RTS until a camera club talk I gave convinced him to purchase a Canon 5D to save his beloved glass from the vultures on Ebay. Six adapters and a trip to Devon transcended his entire investment into the digital age. All the adapters except one took some level of alteration, but now David is one very happy man, shooting his high quality glass with confidence once more.
Make sure you have the following items at hand as you are going to need them all. I have decided to use my 1DsMkIII to set the adapter, as it has Live View which can aid greatly in spotting inconsistencies very quickly. Here is the last one of the batch, a Contax 50mm f1.4. You will need - Lens, Adapter, Scissors, Washing Up Liquid, Lens Cap, Sellotape, Electrical Tape
1 - Attach the Adapter
2 - Attach the lens to the camera
3 - Setting Up to Check Infinity Position
METHOD 1 - Live View Method Infinity Check - By far the most intuitive way of checking the infinity point, but if you do not have this function don't worry, just skip to the next part.
Now zoom into 10x and examine the image centre (the gate in this case). Turn the lens away from the infinity position by an absolute fraction, keeping your eye on the gate. Keep turning and checking. What happens, does it snap into focus as you turn, or does it get worse?
In the case of David's Contax 50mm f1.4, that is exactly what happened, you can see where sharp focus is attained. The adapter going to need some work to make the lens perform properly, but not to worry.
Result A - if the edges seem uniformly unresolved, then the adapter is machined correctly. Result B - If the edges seem sharper on one side than the other, then the adapter is badly machined and should be returned for replacement. Result C - If the edges (not corners remember) seem consistently out of focus either side, you may be experiencing a curve focal plane. Some lenses, like wide angles, have a curved focal plane so those edges will look out of focus. Although slightly unnerving, continue onwards none the less as a curved focal plane is an optical attribute and therefore nothing to worry about.
NOW RETEST THE LENS Now its time to go outside and check the result by using Live View or the RAW method above. Simply put the lens to infinity, line up the same shot as before and see if things have improved.
After retesting David’s Contax 50mm f1.4, the infinity point was still very slightly out, so I applied another layer, this time of sellotape. I cleaned off the old washing up liquid I had first applied to maximise the adhesion, then applied the sellotape and reapplied the washing up liquid, sliding the adapter back on carefully. Things were getting very tight, but after on the second attempt the adapter slid perfectly into place.
Some Final Thoughts. Now the lens and adapter are performing perfectly, NEVER remove the adapter unless you absolutely have to. You probably wont ever need to, but if you do shoot the same lens on different bodies, then you may want to simply return the adapter back to the manufacturer until you find one that fits perfectly, without the need to pack it out. This may turn into a frustrating and time consuming postal exercise so do consider where you stand. For most enthusiasts, an adapted lens will remain adapted, so remember to get the technical assessment right, strive for image perfection and get the most out your glorious glass. David literally saved himself thousands of pounds by converting his Contax collection which will continue to pull superb quality images from his EOS 5D for a long time to come. With practise, you will get better and better at setting up alternative lenses, so persevere and take time, don’t rush it. If you have any further questions about adapted lenses, dont hesitate to get this article buzzing by posting questions below which I will answer when I can.
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From what I have heard they are very good, although I have never adapted a Leica lens for my Canon cameras.
How much are your adapters and do you have a contax 289mm F2.8 to check for clearance?
Hi, First I'm wondering how much your adapers are?
Second, I recently purchased a Contax 28mm F2.8 which had to be sent back. The inside focusing unit when focused to infinity, extended a couple mm's beyond the protective shroud. This puts it too close to the mirror, on my 5DII, which hangs up. Both my Contax 50mm F1.4 and 35-70 work OK, extended to infinity, as the inside unit goes only to the edge of the shroud not past it. I had to grind off the aperature lever and fin to make these work. Can you tell me if there are 28mm lenses out there in which the inside focusing unit only extends, at infinity focus, to the edge of the protective shroud? I don't know wheter to pursue another lens or give up on the 28mm Thanks, MJ ...
1. The adapters I have are mainly cheap ones purchased from SRB Griturn here in the UK, at around £20. I have bought one that was around £40 from HappypageHK, an Ebay seller, but it was no different and twice as expensive.
2. The 5D and the 5DII are a 'crap shoot' as the Americans say. I have known lenses work perfectly well on some models of the camera and not on others. My Contax 28mm f2 fouled the mirror of my 5DII when using the them together in -20C in Canada (I haven't checked this since I have returned). The same lens works perfectly well on my original 5D and never caused me problems. My friend Matt has never had a problem with any lens on his 5D, yet others have had all manner of issues, the 50mm f1.4 and 28mm f2 causing the most common of problems. This is all down to Canon manufacturing inconsistencies, I am fairly sure. The exact internal dimensions of the mirror box vary from camera to camera, only marginally but enough to cause problems. 3. My knowledge of the Contax 28mm f2.8 is very limited, ask the question on the Fred Miranda 'Alternative Lenses' forum, you will get a far more concise answer than I can give. They will be happy to help you there. Contax 28mm
Hi David,
I have the Contax 28mm f2.8 (MM version) and f2 (AE version) - and also a lover of their lens, my fingers love the rubber focus - anyways both focus at infinity and as i expect the F2 is sharper at edges, also being AE much more saturated but the top right "corner" is soft compared with the f2.8! This is at F8 by the way, just wondered your opinion of this, if a fault of the adaptor or is the top right corner known for softness? ( i also found the contax lens beating hasselblad V series lens on my 1DS, apart from the 50mm cfi for close up sharpness - erm a reply could be but try using the contax lens on a V series hassy!) Richard ...
Hi David,
Have you had any experience with the 'old' Olympus lenses adapted to Canon? I'm thinking about getting hold of a 50mm and possibly a 24mm. I recently got a Canon 5d2 and the Contax lenses that worked on my 5d don't work on my 5d2 (35-70mm and 50 1.7). Any problems with Olympus lenses clearing the mirror? James ...
RJohnson - If you have any problems with uneven sharpness its literally always a problem with the adapter alignment. Saying that there is can also be a problem with lens calibration. I am rather lucky that the lens I have seems to be even across the frame, but as this is a rather special lens consider getting it serviced. It has a floating rear element inside, which means if there is any complications then the corners will suffer first.
I would also try shooting the lens at f2 and see what the images look like then. You will not only be able to spot any infinity errors, but get a true feel for just how out the corners are. The whole image will look flat with mushy corners but it should be in focus. ...
James Barrett - I have an Olumpus 24mm f2 and and a Olyumpus 35mm f2.8 Shift. Both are exceptionally good on 21mp cameras and the resolution and 'look' is extremely flattering. The thing you have to watch Olympus lenses for is reduced depth of field at the same aperture as other lenses. I cant get the same DOF from an Oly 24mm at f16 as I can at f16 on a 24mm TS-E mk2, 17-40 f4L or other wide angle glass. As for mirror hang, its never been an issue with all the Oly lenses I have owned on any cameras.
As for the Contax 35-70, thats unusual. I have a 5D, a 5Dmk2 and 1DsIII and it works perfectly on all cameras. But I also have a Contax 28mm f2 and it doesnt work on the 5Dmk2, yet it is fine on the others. It's all to do with manufacture tolerances, a well known issue with the 5D series. Some lenses work fone on some bodies, but not on others. If you want the lenses to work on one body, then get a second hand 1DsII or mkIII as it has no issues whatsoever with any known lenses (he states boldly!). It's part of the reason why I bought one. Write comment |