Difference between revisions of "Pentacon lenses"
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! Pentacon lens | ! Pentacon lens | ||
! was | ! was | ||
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| Pentacon auto 2.8/29 <br/> Pentacon electric 2.8/29 | | Pentacon auto 2.8/29 <br/> Pentacon electric 2.8/29 | ||
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| Pentacon 3.5/30 | | Pentacon 3.5/30 | ||
| Meyer Lydith | | Meyer Lydith | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | [[Domiplan]] 2.8/50 | ||
+ | | [[Domiplan|Meyer Domiplan]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Pentacon auto 1.8/50]] <br/> [[Pentacon electric 1.8/50]] | | [[Pentacon auto 1.8/50]] <br/> [[Pentacon electric 1.8/50]] |
Revision as of 03:22, 6 November 2012
The columns TYPE and aperture/focal length TOGETHER give the lens type names! For larger view, click here! image by Uwe Kulick (Image rights) |
The most Pentacon brand lenses were derived from classical East-German lens constructions.
Pentacon lens | was |
---|---|
Pentacon auto 2.8/29 Pentacon electric 2.8/29 |
Meyer Orestegon |
Pentacon 3.5/30 | Meyer Lydith |
Domiplan 2.8/50 | Meyer Domiplan |
Pentacon auto 1.8/50 Pentacon electric 1.8/50 |
Meyer Oreston |
Pentacon 2.8/100 Pentacon auto 2.8/100 Pentacon electric 2.8/100 |
Meyer Orestor |
Pentacon 2.8/135 Pentacon auto 2.8/135 Pentacon electric 2.8/135 |
Meyer Orestor |
Pentacon 4/200 | Meyer Orestegor (5 elements) |
Pentacon 4/300 | Meyer Orestegor (5 elements) |
Pentacon 5.6/500 | Meyer Orestegor (4 elements) |