Switch to English Language Passer en langue française Omschakelen naar Nederlandse Taal Wechseln Sie zu deutschen Sprache Passa alla lingua italiana
Members: 57,951   Posts: 1,194,933   Online: 912
      
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 17
  1. #1
    David H. Bebbington's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    East Kent, United Kingdom
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    2,364
    Images
    36

    Mystery ULF lens

    I acquired a 14" f5.6 lens on e-bay which has no name on it. It is in a black mount, appears to be of Tessar type, has a 3" filter thread (not metric) and stops down to a marked f32. It has the serial number 272545. The iris diaphragm is installed closer to the rear optical group than the front. It is in a 3" flange which requires a 3 1/8" clearance hole. It is slightly cloudy (it's going for cleaning) so it's hard to tell if it's coated, it could well not be.

    Can anyone recognise the lens from this description? I would be curious to find out what it is.

    Regards,

    David

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Nantucket
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    539
    Kind of hard to tell without a picture, but it sounds very similar to a couple of old process lenses I have, one of which is marked Burke & James

  3. #3
    David H. Bebbington's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    East Kent, United Kingdom
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    2,364
    Images
    36
    Yes, a picture would be a good idea!
    Last edited by David H. Bebbington; 07-23-2007 at 03:18 AM.

  4. #4

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    2,571
    Quote Originally Posted by David H. Bebbington
    Yes, a picture would be a good idea!
    At even odds, your lens is a WW-II vintage british aerial camera lens, not a process lens. Likely to be hard to put in shutter, too.

    Good luck, have fun,

    Dan

  5. #5
    David H. Bebbington's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    East Kent, United Kingdom
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    2,364
    Images
    36
    Thanks for the 2 suggestions. Someone recently was selling a similar lens on e-bay which they described as an Aviar, which as I recall was a Cooke design, but actually made by Taylor, Taylor and Hobson. It is highly plausible that my lens is a WWII aerial-camera lens.

    I had the lens cleaned to remove some internal fog and it is now spotless. As regards fitting it up, this should not be too hard. A guy in Switzerland who advertises Sinar-pattern lens panels in standard sizes on e-bay also cuts custom-sized holes (regular panels $30, custom sizes $60), fortunately the lens came with a flange, so it is now on its panel. I shall be using it with my pneumatic Day shutter which I mentioned recently on another thread on barrel lenses, this fits onto the front of the lens via an iris-type clamp, so I'm up and running!

    Regards,

    David

    PS: The guy who makes Sinar-pattern panels is:

    Peter Nowak
    Bietenberg 1
    CH-6418 Rothenthurm
    Switzerland

    E-mail: nowak@intercortex.com

    I am sure he speaks English, although I wrote in German. Did good work and took just 7 days to make the panel.
    Last edited by David H. Bebbington; 03-23-2005 at 11:06 PM. Reason: Adding more info.

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    2,571
    Quote Originally Posted by David H. Bebbington
    Thanks for the 2 suggestions. Someone recently was selling a similar lens on e-bay which they described as an Aviar, which as I recall was a Cooke design, but actually made by Taylor, Taylor and Hobson.
    The Aviar is not a Cooke design. It was designed by A. Warmisham of Taylor, Taylor, & Hobson. TT&H's photographic lens-making division is now called Cooke Optics.

    TTH's use of the name Cooke has created much confusion. In the beginning, H. D. Taylor, an employee of T. Cooke & Sons, a microscope manufacturer later called Cooke, Troughton, & Sims, designed the Cooke triplet. Cooke's licensed Taylor's design to Taylor, Taylor, & Hobson (no connection to H. D.), who subsequently produced many versions of it, many badged Cooke and Taylor, Taylor, & Hobson. Eventually TT&H applied the word Cooke to lenses that weren't triplets, e.g., Mr. Warmisham's Aviar.

    The Aviar is a 4/4 dialyte type. Not a triplet or a tessar like your monstrosity. There was a 14"/5.6 Aviar made for use in aerial cameras, also a gross monstrosity. I foolishly got one to hang way out in front of a 2x3 Speed Graphic. Not a good idea, alas.

    To add to the fun, according to the Lens Collector's Vade Mecum, during WWII there was a 14"/5.6 tessar type lens for aerial cameras. I saw one a couple of months ago at a camera show. Not a lens for dropping on feet, and neither is my 14" Aviar.

    To add more to the confusion, when Mr. Warmisham retired his position was filled by the legendary G. H. Cook. He was awarded a technical Oscar in, I think, 1989, for Cooke zoom lenses. These for cine and TV cameras, not for LF.

    Cheers,

    Dan

  7. #7
    David H. Bebbington's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    East Kent, United Kingdom
    Shooter
    Medium Format
    Posts
    2,364
    Images
    36
    Thanks for the info, Dan. As far as I can tell, my lens is a Tessar type, the reason I had to send it away for cleaning was because it was cloudy in the front (air-spaced) lens group and I could not take the two elements apart and clean them myself. My lens is not coated, which of course usually indicates manufacture before the end of World War II. It has no name on it, I was expecting to see a Government arrow stamp and an inventory number on it, which was British practice, this particular lens was sent across from Canada.

    I can imagine you struggled to fit your lens to a 2x3 Graphic, my lens needs a 3 1/8" mounting hole to accept its flange, because of its weight I shall not attempt to use it with wooden cameras but only with my Sinar Norma.

    Regards,

    David

  8. #8

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    2,571
    Interesting. The 14"/5.6 tessar thingy I saw had the Air Ministry stamp and the MoD broad arrow. IIRC, its s/n prefix was VV, I think that stands for Ross.

    I've seen other WW-II vintage english lenses with the AM stamp and no broad arrow. Do you know when the broad arrow was introduced?

    And some of my ex-MoD lenses have neither the broad arrow nor a contract number. Not that this affects how well they work.

    I never hung my 14"/5.6 Aviar on my 2x3 Speed. Did cobble up adapters to hold it far in front of a Nikon and shot it that way. Sharp, flary. Your tessar should be less flary.

    Cheers,

    Dan

  9. #9
    Struan Gray's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Lund, Sweden
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    913
    According to Brewer's Dictionary, the Broad Arrow mark on government stores was introduced around 1700 by Henry, Earl of Romney while he was Master General of the Ordnance. Various broad arrow devices had been stamped or carved on things before then, but the mark found on British military gear is the one introduced by m'lud Romney.

    Dan, do you have a complete set of manufacturer codes for the various MOD lenses? I have a beast of a 36" f6.8 tucked away in store that is a 'UU'. There's a "JHD" stamp on the side, so I assumed it was a Dallmeyer, but my idle curiosity would like to know.

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Shooter
    Multi Format
    Posts
    2,571
    Sorry, Struan, I don't. I got the "TT = Taylor Hobson" from the Vade Mecum. It doesn't disagree with itself over what TT means, does disagree with itself about what UU and VV mean. I think, great stress think, that VV means Ross and that UU means Dallmeyer, but can't prove or disprove my belief.

    Cheers,

    Dan

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast


 

APUG PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR INFRASTRUCTURE:


 
                     

Contact Us  |  Support Us!  |  Advertise  |  Site Terms  |  Archive  —   Search  |  Mobile Device Access  |  RSS  |  Facebook  |  Linkedin