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NEW TOY
ME
| 10/18/14
| swampsniper
Posted on 10/18/2014 1:34:23 PM PDT by SWAMPSNIPER
Another of the old Minolta classics to play with. It's a constant f4.5, highly rated for IQ and really compact. This may just be my new favorite walkaround lens.
TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Chit/Chat; Hobbies; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: camera; lens; minolta
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To: Yosemitest
All the Sony Alphas use the Minolta A mount.
To: Yosemitest
To: yarddog
The Minolta Maxxum AF 7000 is film, and it's not digital.
It's 35mm film.
I'm sure there would be a great market for a company that would make a digital camera body
that could control and use these lenses.
They really are high quality lenses.
43
posted on
10/19/2014 8:36:01 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
To: Yosemitest
Did you skip reading this entire thread?
It has been pointed out many times that the Sony DSLRs work with the Minolta A mount lenses.
The 7000 uses the A mount.
44
posted on
10/19/2014 8:38:47 AM PDT
by
yarddog
(G)
To: SWAMPSNIPER
So the Sony Alpha Cameras are digital and use and upload to computers or iPhones?
Can they control the Minolta AF lenses or do they just do manual controls on the Minolta AF lenses ?
45
posted on
10/19/2014 8:49:52 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
To: yarddog
I was just responding and didn't read the whole thread.
Between the dog outside, and the phone and other things demanding my time at home, I've been busy.
46
posted on
10/19/2014 8:51:27 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
To: Yosemitest
The Minolta AF lenses work exactly as they were intended to work, 100% function on Sony Alpha cameras. Sony bought Minolta’s camera line out and incorporated a lot of Minolta’s ideas. Sony is coming after the Canon/Nikon monopoly with a vengeance.
To: Yosemitest
To: SWAMPSNIPER
I found
my answer.
Sony & Minolta Maxxum AF lenses Does this camera work with the Minolta Maxxum AF lenses?
Yes, ALL Sony Alpha digital SLR cameras will work with Minolta Maxxum AF lenses.
This is explicitly stated by Sony. (NOTE: 'Alpha' was the name Minolta used for its SLR cameras sold in Japan (the name 'Maxxum' was used in the United States market, in other international markets Minolta used the name 'Dynax').
Sony took over the 'Alpha' name to highlight the fact that its new DSLR's made from 2006 onwards
were a continuation of the Minolta line, using the Minolta AF lens mount).
Minolta Maxxum AF lenses will mount correctly on ALL Sony Alpha DSLR cameras, autofocus will work,
and if they are Minolta 'D' lenses (distance-encoding) then the 'D' feature works.
For more information, look up the article 'The Alpha Advantage' on the website: AlphaMountWorld.com. (Google will find it for you)
you can also visit dyxum.com for a VERY in-depth listing of all of the compatible lenses for the alpha system,
as well as reviews and ratings for each one based on user experience.
In addition, you'll find a very helpful, unbiased, knowledgeable forum full of users ready to help out the alpha photographer, or any photographer for that matter.
Check it out, it'll be more help than you ever though you needed.
I have an A200, and i visit Dyxum regularly.
happy shooting!I hope this is helpful.
Here's
Using Minolta Lenses on the Sony Alpha By TOM BONNER, AUGUST 10, 2010
The most common question I get about the Sony Alpha dSLRs is "Can I use Minolta lenses on the Sony Alpha dSLR?"
The answer is, not surprisingly,
Over a span of fifty-plus years, Minolta produced a dizzying array of optics. The company continued to pour its own glass, long after other camera manufactures started to outsource their glass making. In addition to making lenses for photographers, Minolta produced optics for scientific, medical and industrial needs. A lens may say Minolta on it, but that is no guarantee that lens is appropriate for photographic use.
"I don't care about that, I just want to know if my dad's old Minolta lenses will fit my new Sony Alpha!"
I understand, but the answer is still "it depends."
Fortunately, figuring which Minolta lens are compatible with the Sony mount is fairly straight forward, but there is a lot of confusion and misinformation about.
Minolta created a number of lens lines during its photographic manufacturing period. The early Minolta M43 Lieca mount lens were so well designed that Lieca actually contracted Minolta to produce some of their optics. Minolta also produced lenses for it's short lived 110 SLR.
In the last fifty years or so, the bulk of Minolta optics production was devoted to lenses in three major mount types:
- A-Mount auto focus lenses (1985 - 2006) which are fully Sony compatible
- SR and ROKKOR manual focus lenses (1958-2001), which can only be used on the Sony Alpha with an adapter
- Vectis auto focus lenses, which cannot be used on the Alpha
As you might expect, there are idiosyncracies with certain lenses that could effect whether a specific lens is 100% compatible. The statements above, however, apply for the overwhelming amount of Minolta glass.
Let’s look at each lens mount in detail:
Minolta A-Mount lenses
Minolta introduced the A-mount in 1985, and with only a few slight variations, they continued to use the same mount for all their top level SLRs and DSLRs until the Minolta photographic assets were sold to Sony. Although Sony has started to use the term Alpha mount to describe their dSLR lens system, it is really the old Minolta A-mount. Minolta A-lenses work on the Sony Alpha, because Minolta originally designed the mount that Sony currently uses. Sony has beefed up the camera mount in its later offerings, but the lens mount itself is exactly the same as Minolta. So all Minolta A-Mount lenses attach and operate perfectly on the Sony Alpha. There is no difference, because the mounts are identical.
As I said, there are few idiosyncrasies that effect some of the Minolta lenses. The biggest of these involves the power zoom "I" lenses. When Minolta introduced the "I" series film SLRs, they included a power zoom feature that allowed users to change the focal length of certain lenses by pressing a button. I'm not sure how useful an asset this was, but Minolta sold a ton of I lenses.
Obviously, there are no power buttons or zoom motors on any Sony Alpha, or for that matter, any Minolta dSLR. So obviously, you can't use the power zoom feature of the i lenses on these cameras. But that is the only limitation. These lens attach to the Sony Alpha, just like any lens in the Sony catalog. Auto focus, auto exposure, auto diaphragm all work perfectly. So does image stabilization. The only limitation is that there is no power zoom; you have to zoom manually. So technically, the i lenses are not 100% compatible with the Sony Alpha's; but do you really care? For all practical purposes, the i optics work just fine.
Sony also indicates that Minolta DT lenses (designed to cover the APS-C sensor) may not work correctly on the full frame A850 and A900. They do work as expected on the APS-C cameras that compse most of the Sony dSLR lineup.
What about third-party A mount lenses? Almost as soon as Minolta introduced the A-mount in 1985, lens makers like Tamron, Sigma and Vivitar started cranking out auto-focus optics to fit the new Maxxum AF cameras. So there are thousands, if not millions of non-Minolta, non-Sony A-mount lenses out there.
In theory, these lenses were designed to be compatible with the original Maxxum 7000. Minolta lenses for the Maxxum 7000 are fully comptible with the Alpha, so you would expect the third party optics for the Maxxum to be usable on the Alpha.
You don't haver to spend a fortune to equip your Sony Alpha with a full suite of lenses. Second-hand Minolta glass can offer you an inexpensive, high quality alternative to high-end optics.
In truth, most older third party A-Mount lenses work beautifully on the Alpha. Unfortunately, there are some early third party lenses that don't work correctly when attached to the Sony Alpha. Some manufactures offer an upgrade program to convert older lenses to work on the Sony dSLR mount, but this involves time and expense. If you are considering buying a third party A-mount lens, I suggest that you check out the lens database at Dyxum. They have an entry for almost every A-mount lens in existence, including optics you probably never knew existed. The great thing is every lens is rated for sharpness, quality build and general usefulness. You can check whether a third party lens will work on on the Alpha. In just a couple of minutes you will have an idea if a particular lens is a dud or a bargain.
Minolta Rokkor lenses
Next up, you will run across millions of older Rokkor and SR mount lenses. Minolta cranked these out in great numbers before they introduced the Maxxum auto focus cameras in 1985. At one point, Minolta was churning out 30,000 lenses a month, and they did that for years. What many photographers don't realize is that Minolta kept many of the older Rokkor lenses in their catalog for years after introducing the Maxxum. As late as 2001, you could still buy a brand new X700 manual focus camera from Minolta, and they also offered many of the more popular Rokkor lenses to go with it.
As I mentioned in an earlier article, Minolta probably would have continued to use the Rokkor X-mount on the Maxxum cameras, but they couldn't find the room to incorporate auto-focus into the Rokkor design. So they made the painful choice to abandon the old mount and create a completely new design for the auto focus cameras.
This means that you cannot attach a Rokkor lens directly to an A-Mount camera. The mounts are completely different, there is no compatibility.
Of course, Minolta realized that they had millions of existing customers with extensive collections of Rokkor lenses. These photographers were unlikely to adopt the new Maxxum models unless they could bring their older lenses with them. So Minolta designed an adapter which allowed Maxxum users to make use of Rokkor lenses. These adapters were actually in the form of a teleconverter, and for a long time were very expensive and difficult to find. More recently, a number of accessory manufacturers have responded to the need by offering inexpensive Minolta MA-MC adapters. I will delve more completely into MA-MC adapters in a later post in this series. The important thing is that the only way to mount a Minolta SR, MC, MD Rokkor style lens to the Sony Alpha is with an adapter. Unless you want to seriously modify the lens, which is another possibly I will discuss in another post.
Minolta Vectis Lenses
The final lens you might run across in your search for used Minolta lenses are known as Vectis mount lenses. In the 1990s, Minolta developed a line of APS (Advance Photo System) cameras they called the Vectis. Some of the Vectis models were fixed lens rangefinders, but Minolta also offered a Vectis SLR that offered interchangeable lenses. There was even a 3mpVectis dSLR known as the RD3000. While Vectis lenses are not as common at the A-mount and X-Mount optics, you may still run across them on eBay, Craig's List, pawn shops and used camera vendors. They look quite similar to the A-mount lenses and many of them are marked with the Minolta logo.
Do not be fooled. Vectis lenses are not compatible with the Minolta A-mount and there is no way to use these optics on a Sony Alpha. When the Vectis SLR was introduced, Minolta announced they were creating an adapter that would allow photographers to use their existing A-mount lenses on the new Vectis cameras. As far as I can tell, the adapter was never put into production, so the A-mount and Vectis lenses are totally incompatible. Even if Minolta did actually produce the adapter, it was designed to attach A-mount lenses to Vectis cameras, so it would be no help in using Vectis glass on the Alpha models. I don't know of any adapter that would mount a Vectis lens on the A-mount, and I doubt that there is sufficient interest in the V-mount optics that any third party will ever produce one.
That answer my question .
49
posted on
10/19/2014 9:53:59 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
To: SWAMPSNIPER
Thanks for the info.
I'll have to read it later.
Responsibilities calling me for now.
50
posted on
10/19/2014 9:55:43 AM PDT
by
Yosemitest
(It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
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