5 elements, 5 groups

Hibbs

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I am awaiting delivery of a Tokina made Vivitar that has 5 elements in 5 groups.

Could someone share with me what type of lens this may be? Is it a Heliar formula? Would this relatively low element count excel at low light?

Lastly, which sites are best for researching the various formulas and their history.

Thanks
 
You don't give the focal length or camera mount. Wide angle, normal and telephoto lenses have significantly different designs. Also rangefinder vs SLR lenses have different designs in the wide angle range.
 
"Photographic Lenses", Neblette, 1965 edition (best) 1973 edition- latter is available for free download.
 
You don't give the focal length or camera mount. Wide angle, normal and telephoto lenses have significantly different designs. Also rangefinder vs SLR lenses have different designs in the wide angle range.
SLR lens 35mm 3.5
 
Is this the lens you are interested in?
If you scroll down the page and look at the blue link under Lens Construction you will find the lens diagram. The page does not appear to categorize the lens formula.


Doing some quick searching, the 5 element heliar designs all use a 2-1-2 arrangement
 
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The Schneider Retina Reflex Curtagon 35/2.8 was a 5/5 I believe. Later versions for other cameras were 6 elements. The Nikon series E 28/2.8 original Nikon Af-Nikkor 28/2.8 was also 5/5.
 
Not a 35mm format lens, but 6x9 to the equivalent FoV of 39-40mm.

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The Fujinon has always appeared interesting to me because there aren't cemented groups, nor it's a 6 element design much more common in Double Gauss derivatives. In RFF there is this fantastic thread that focuses on such types of lenses developed towards faster variations: A Short History of Fast Normal Lenses
 
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