Koni Kowa
Well-known
ooohh, a 21mm, do you like it? any pics you can show?
Still waiting for my OM-4 to put the 21mm in... but I'll be back !
😀
ooohh, a 21mm, do you like it? any pics you can show?
I know 🙂 I read about it too.He died last year at age 76.
Well, I finally managed to get a 'made in Japan' 50mm f/1.8 for my OM10. It came along with an OM40 and two Komine made Vivitar lenses (28 f/2.8 and 70-210 f/2.8-4) in another charity shop rescue case. 🙂
Only problem is the 50 has some fungus on the back of the front element. Now I can get the front group out quite easily but I have no idea how to get the front element out of the group to clean it. :-(
Ronnie
Bit of bad luck there Ronnies.
Still the mij lenses are around and another will probably come up quite quickly. At least the charity shop benefited and I hope you aren't too much out of pocket. But what was the OM 40 like? Its an interesting beast!! If you don't like the covering you can always rip it off - very easy in my experience. You can then put on something normal.
jesse
Some of your gear has travelled very widely... That 50/1.2 came to me from another member here (you know who you are..!) who I know will be pleased to know it passed on in the spirit it reached me, and to a good home.
My only suggestion based on what you've written is to try the 50 on an OM1 with a 1-4 screen. Not yours if it's been adjusted to take the 2 series by John, but maybe there are other helpful zuikoholics around you....
The OM1 finder is bright enough with the 1 series, and the 1-4, just a plain screen is incredibly precise with the 1.2.
Whatever though - keep pushing the button.
Tom
Recently, I got into OM, and in a mad GAS attack, ended up with three OM bodies. The OM-4 is spectacular, the OM-1 solid and smooth - but I just couldn't get friendly with the OM-2S. It's fine and operates well but the program mode doesn't help me much, and the transition from program/auto to manual spotmeter is awful.
What I mean is, I want to use the spotmeter when I know the scene has tricky lighting, and I want to quickly get a spot reading and leave it there without a lot of adjustment. The OM-4 has this right: you quickly use a spot reading in auto if it's a one-off, or get your reading (at current aperture) in auto and switch to manual if the scene lighting is constant. It's sweet. The OM-2S from auto to manual is like two entirely different and unrelated lighting meters, that are unrelated - each individually is fine, but they don't complement each other. Anyway, although I like the looks of the OM-2S and the feel in the hand, the package doesn't work for me (or offer much over the OM-4).
Only downside: I only had the one 50/1.8 lens, and she took that. I guess that means I'll have to look for a 50/1.4 for myself )
Greg-
If you don't use AE, then I would sell the OM-2 and save up for the OM-4. The AE on is the best part on the OM-2.
Nice shots! Love the Grain 🙂