Hibbs
R.I.P. Charlie
Well...now trying to find some Kodak Portra 400VC.
Seems rarer than hen's teeth.
May have to order online.
~hibbs
Seems rarer than hen's teeth.
May have to order online.
~hibbs
Erik L
Well-known
at min focus mine focus about 2" behind subject.

Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
All right, as promised, here are some of my latest shots with my Jupiter-9 lens (please ignore the black border, this comes from scanning).
Comments are welcome.





Comments are welcome.
wdeskiew
Member
I have both versions of this lens. My observation is that the Kiev mounted one performs better (but only a little bit) than M39 version. I can't really say it is a focusing issue, maybe it is the way they were assembled?
Florian1234
it's just hide and seek
I have both versions of this lens. My observation is that the Kiev mounted one performs better (but only a little bit) than M39 version. I can't really say it is a focusing issue, maybe it is the way they were assembled?
No clue, mine is a M39 version. Maybe it is shimming to fine-tune?
Krosya
Konicaze
I used to have a J-9 and I think it's a superb lens if it is calibrated well. Mine was. I only sold it because I get similar results with Hex 90 and Nikkor 10.5cm yet with a higher hit rate. At f2 Jupiter 9 can be a challenge to focus. But when you get it - it's awsome - sharp with beautiful bokeh:


fanshaw
Well-known
I think that that focussing issues with Kiev mount lenses are less common than with LTM because of the bayonet mount. It is well known that users of Soviet LTMs were advised to have their cameras/lenses adjusted every time the lens was changed. No such procedure was advised for Kiev cameras.
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