Yes, the standard 35mm Curtagon has a f/2.8 maximum aperture.I looked up the Curtagon and it looks like an f/4 lens is that correct?
Yes, the standard 35mm Curtagon has a f/2.8 maximum aperture.I looked up the Curtagon and it looks like an f/4 lens is that correct?
Yes, the standard 35mm Curtagon has a f/2.8 maximum aperture.
I don't know, sorry. My Curtagon is a 35mm PA-Curtagon f/4 in 35mm ALPA bayonet mount. But, if you can adapt an M42 mount lens to Xpan, a 35mm lens has fairly forgiving depth of field characteristics. So you could likely use the non-shift Curtagon quite effectively as a scale focus lens for general imaging, although obviously, wide open and at close range, much more care would be needed to assure accurate focus.That would be fantastic! I just looked it up, it's an M42 lens is that right? How do you focus on the Xpan?
I don't know, sorry. My Curtagon is a 35mm PA-Curtagon f/4 in 35mm ALPA bayonet mount.
In really low light, gaining one stop from f/4 to f/2.8 but losing rangefinder coupling seems a bit like taking one step forward, one step back, and then on step to the side. But then again, isn't a lot of photography chasing a series of compromises? 😛
OP, do you already have a Xpan kit, but just looking for a bit more speed?
The Contarex 35mm Curtagon is an F4 lens and the adapter has no RF coupling. I am used to the Hasselblad SWC so scale focusing isn't a problem for shots from 3 meters. No external finder is necessary. I found if you use the entire built-in viewfinder it is pretty close to what the camera actually sees.
It does.Oh I thought you were saying that it had a max aperture of f/2.8.
The former is a f/2.8 maximum aperture. The latter—f/4.
Dammit I was so confused.
Who delivers the C/Y-Xpan-adapter? It was shown at photokina and i was so stupid not to buy. reseller is gone.I owned an Xpan years ago and the 30mm lens to me was unaffordable at around $4000. I bought some adapters including Leica, Contarex and Contax C/Y to Xpan. I tried the Zeiss 35/2.8 shift lens, Contarex 35 Curtagon, and various R lenses. The Zeiss and Contarex covered the pano frame however there will be mechanical vignetting. There are light baffles if you look into the Xpan mount and they block both sides of the frame. You will still get a pano image with a few MM cut off on both sides. BTW the Contarex Curtagon is an extremely good performer better than the R mount version though I know they are supposed to be the same lens. If you want to go cheap you can try to find the Exakta mount Curtagon.