Minolta to Nikon --Switching to Digital -- LENSE problems
Been using Minoltas for years--most used lens was 500 mm mirrored... In switching to DIGITAL, I'm trying to get as close to that as I can with Nikon...may have been advised wrong by a relative but bought the Nikon D60...now I'm concerned about lenses that I was told would work (capabilities of the camera re: lenses) -- I bought the Nikkor 300 mm and it is nothing close to results using my Minolta/500 mirrored. I shoot in forests and jungles, various lighting, usually long distances and quite small subjects. Any advice or opinion, helpful experience is greatly appreciated. My email addy is: [email protected]. Thanks!
Cameras - Sigma - Telephoto 105mm f/2.8 EX Macro Autofocus Lens for Nikon AF-D
Answers & Comments
Mirror lenses have no aperture nor AF, so they mount via a T mount. A $30 item that screws on the end of a mirror lens that fits your camera. A mirror lens has it's physical likes and dislikes against a glass 500mm. A glass 500mm will give a better image if you can stop down to F8 F16. Then you have shutter speeds to consider and those lenses are usually connected to the camera's contacts. So they can be specific to a single body. There are older Tamron lenses that take Adaptall mounts, they are old and hard to find. But they solved the multiple body problems for "auto" program lenses. None had AF, when AF camera around, we were back to individual lenses per body.