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No hay artículos en el carroErin
Comentado en Canadá el 18 de junio de 2024
Used on two lenses, first 2 photos attached are with the kit 18-55mm and second two are with 55-250mm. It definitely takes some time to get used to focusing; especially with the 18-55mm but it is still a lot of fun and worth the money.
HS Teacher
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de noviembre de 2023
The precision on these is excellent and they handle the semi-abuse of high school students well. Would definitely buy again.
Customer
Comentado en Canadá el 15 de octubre de 2022
Works and fits on camera great, user friendly, we are happy with product.
FamousRoger(arry) ;-*
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 25 de mayo de 2021
This is not going to be an item you are going to reach for much... Or at least, it hasn't been for me. I shoot macro relatively often - occasionally for a client, but mostly for my own photography, my "funsies", which I have begun printing in large format and giving away as gifts in anticipation of selling the work casually in intimate runs of prints; My ideas, my camera, my photos, my digital processing, my printing, my printer...So no one is paying me... So there is no real certainty of monetary reward, which I have accepted, but I feel my "funsies" are often the most compelling of the photographs I produce (as they are being produced for the sake of the medium and not for an explicit marketing/advertising goal, or the appeasement of a client for the satisfaction of their vanity, or some other such motivation... Now, excuse me, I shouldn't trivialize any of the work I have done, because I have remained a pretty exclusive little photog, and I do put a serious amount of thought, research, experimentation, and ultimately, time into all of the work I do ... ANYWAY, I purchased this knowing that it would have a somewhat limited application. That is true. I have a bellows, I have several extension tubes, I have tons of mount adapters, I have filter thread adapters, filters of all kinds - including the magnifying "macro" filters, I have yet to get a helicoid, but I am looking for one specifically for projector lenses out of Russia, but the point is, I have a lot of gear intended to create "macro" image... Oh, I have a T-mount adapter and a microscope as well... oh, and the BR2 adapter on the PB4 from Nikon (it is an F-mount to 52mm filter thread...or 55...IDK, doesn't matter, it works well and creates a confident connection with an attached lens and camera...It is all aluminum.it works very well, especially for the price. it is solid and fits snug. It's all manual, no contacts of any kind. You will need to set the camera to "release shutter with no lens detected" or whatever verbiage your camera's menu uses. You will need to use lenses which are capable of manual focus and of manual aperture control if you want the best results. Though you could get away with a lens which does not allow for aperture control (and just live with the aperture at max of min), but without focus you will with little control over focus unless you have a bellows or helicoid as well, allowing manual flange distance focusing.Yeah, for its price, it is def worth it. I have about 5 "macro" lenses (lenses with macro functionality, one truly "macro" lens, the 100mm f2.8 L IS, which is great. I haven't tried it backward, but it's got the electronic only aperture and I think even the focus may require power...there is another similar piece out there which would allow the use of AF, AE, all of that - it is essentially this piece with another that the lens mounts to in order to communicate with the camera... Though I have a lot of "legacy" or "vintage" lenses, I still may invest in another of these just to have the ability to use modern lenses backwards... now, again, there are few times when this is really the best look or even possible to utilize, but it really does enhance the capabilities of the camera and lenses...BUT YOU NEED TO BE USING MANUAL FOCUS, MANUAL APERTURE, COMPLETELY MECHANICAL LENSES... if you don't have completely mechanical lenses - like the Canon FD, FL, R mounts lenses (Not to be confused with RF), or the old pentax Takumar, the contax-yashica lenses, or the legacy F-mount lenses to name a few, then you won't have much fun with this.If you do, you will find the price is just hard to argue with. It may not break down walls of limitations for most - but it can, with the right lens, produce outstanding magnification at the right flange focal distance.... getting this piece is the cheap and easy step - finding that right lens for the magnification and look you want may be more expensive and more of a struggle - as I said, the 55mm macro by nikon from back in the 70s it started being produced, that's a great lens for something like this...
Gary Pamperien
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 21 de diciembre de 2021
Blows me away! So easy! Do know that there is no focus or aperture control
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