Max Power
Well-known
Seriously 😛
I was thinking about this this morning. A week or so ago, a friend gave me a Praktica SLR. It uses the M42 screw-mount. I also own a few FSU RFs and a 50/1.5 Nokton for my R3A.
I find that screw-mount lenses are a bit of a PITA to mount. You have to line them up just right or you risk counter-threading them which could damage the mount. They are also IMO longer to mount and dismount.
So, my question: why did/do some manufacturers bother with a screw-mount setup over a bayonet mount? Were bayonet mounts harder to engineer and manufacture a century ago? Or is it simply a case of nobody really coming up with the idea of a bayonet mount in time to beat screw-mounts? Is there something inherently 'better' about a screw-mount which I don't understand?
Inquiring minds want to know 😀
Cheers,
Kent
I was thinking about this this morning. A week or so ago, a friend gave me a Praktica SLR. It uses the M42 screw-mount. I also own a few FSU RFs and a 50/1.5 Nokton for my R3A.
I find that screw-mount lenses are a bit of a PITA to mount. You have to line them up just right or you risk counter-threading them which could damage the mount. They are also IMO longer to mount and dismount.
So, my question: why did/do some manufacturers bother with a screw-mount setup over a bayonet mount? Were bayonet mounts harder to engineer and manufacture a century ago? Or is it simply a case of nobody really coming up with the idea of a bayonet mount in time to beat screw-mounts? Is there something inherently 'better' about a screw-mount which I don't understand?
Inquiring minds want to know 😀
Cheers,
Kent