I inherited a M42 Super Multi coated Takumar 50mm 1.4 Now what for a body?

Also, the other option is the chinon memotron ce ii which will give you aperture priority but prices have climbed up recently.
 
There is also a 7-element Super-Takumar 50mm F1.4, uses Thoriated glass. The Super-Multi-coated 50/1.4 uses the same formula, just multi-coated and adds wide-open metering.

For a while, I tried to find such a Thorium lens for sale, but it was too costly, in my opinion then. I have a regular 50/1.4.
 
The 8-element 50/1.4 is like ly to sell for more than the Thorium glass version as it is uncommon. Check the SN range to verify.
 
The 8-element 50/1.4 is like ly to sell for more than the Thorium glass version as it is uncommon. Check the SN range to verify.

Just checked my 50/1.4 and it's the 8-element version. Came with a black Spotmatic I bought for $35.00, maybe five years ago.

Jim B.
 
Newz Alert..... I have been going around and around with URth, the maker of the M42/F mount adapter I purchased, about the lack of compatibility with my Super Multi coated Takumar . they refused to believe that there was a problem, although quite nice about it. Finally, they cried uncle and offered to give me a refund without returning. they need to buy one of these lenses and see what they can do with some design changes. And..they need to consider adding caveats to their website about certain lens versions lack of compatibility. I'm kind of glad I did not buy a SP F (black) on impulse because they aren't that inexpensive any more.

I've learned several lessons... One, is that it's not very smart to try and adapt any lens to a Nikon DSLR.
 
How did you determine it’s an 8? SN numbers are not a particularly reliable way to do so...

This is what I found on the web:

The infrared mark on the lens barrel is to the right of the number 4 (aperture). The stop-down switch is marked A/M, not auto/man. The rear most element is slightly protruding from the barrel, when viewed from the side.

Jim B.
 
This is what I found on the web:

The infrared mark on the lens barrel is to the right of the number 4 (aperture). The stop-down switch is marked A/M, not auto/man. The rear most element is slightly protruding from the barrel, when viewed from the side.

Jim B.

the the super multicoated takumars....like mine, do not have an infra red line on the barrel. also it had auto/man. So I knew it wasn't an 8'er. they are all really nice pieces.
 
the the super multicoated takumars....like mine, do not have an infra red line on the barrel. also it had auto/man. So I knew it wasn't an 8'er. they are all really nice pieces.

All Super-Multi-Coated and SMC’s were 7’s anyway. Only the Super Takumar line had the 8 element version.
 
I am going to buck to trend here and say that I am not a fan of any version of the Spotmatic as a film platform for M42 lenses. Dark focusing screens, heavy, multi-step metering operation, weird batteries for many of them, and the ES and later can only autoexpose later Pentax lenses. Like folks suggested above, the 1978 Chinon CE-3 (autoexposure with every M42 A/M lens in one step, not two), the newer VC Bessaflex (although also "stop down" metering), or an M42 adapter on a good Contax C/Y body are my preferred options.
 
This is what I found on the web:

The infrared mark on the lens barrel is to the right of the number 4 (aperture). The stop-down switch is marked A/M, not auto/man. The rear most element is slightly protruding from the barrel, when viewed from the side.

Jim B.

This sounds correct.
 
I am going to buck to trend here and say that I am not a fan of any version of the Spotmatic as a film platform for M42 lenses. Dark focusing screens, heavy, multi-step metering operation, weird batteries for many of them, and the ES and later can only autoexpose later Pentax lenses. Like folks suggested above, the 1978 Chinon CE-3 (autoexposure with every M42 A/M lens in one step, not two), the newer VC Bessaflex (although also "stop down" metering), or an M42 adapter on a good Contax C/Y body are my preferred options.

Well, I've got several of the S-M-C Takumars in various focal lengths and so I'm happy with the F, ES and ES II. The only drawback is that there isn't a meter on/off switch (other than turning the shutter speed dial). I don't like the stop-down metering of the earlier Spotmatics and yes, finding the correct battery is hard these days. I sure am not shelling out a boatload for a Bessaflex!
 
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