Archive for August, 2010

Fuji Lens

Searching for Fuji Lens? You”re really close! This page was in fact made especially to make your task easier! It delivers many seperate sources to get your hands on, or just learn about them, so be sure to scroll down the page to the bottom.


First, let”s start by searching Ebay for Fuji Lens:

[phpbay]Fuji Lens, 85, “78997″[/phpbay]

Question: fuji 8100 lens cap size ?

hey,so I have just bought refurbished fuji s8100fd and of course it came without lens cap. there are plenty on ebay or amazon but.. I don’t know what size I need. does anyone know?

Answer: There’s normally an indication on the front of the lens expressed in
“mm”. It’s read something like 52mm.

If that isn’t there your owner’s manual should have the size.

Another excellent place to find Fuji Lens is on Amazon… They have way more than just books!
[phpzon]Fuji Lens, 16, Photo[/phpzon]

Question: Film Fuji S1000fd lens?

I have a Fuji S1000fd and I really like but do not know if this specific camera lens. I really need help. Please anwser.

Answer: The lens is not interchangeable in that chamber. Comes with a lens on it. My experience with Fuji has been generally good.

I hope you liked our page on Fuji Lens… If you did not find what you were after, try above in that search box. (It”s downright psychic!)

Minolta Auto Meter

Looking for Minolta Auto Meter? You”ve found the right place. This whole page was made just to help! It has many different sources to aquire or learn about them, so be sure to check out the whole page, all the way to the bottom.


First up, let”s start by searching Ebay for Minolta Auto Meter:

[phpbay]Minolta Auto Meter, 90, “30078″[/phpbay]

Question: Digital Compacts.?

The Canon 850 with wide angle lens is reviewed as being so so picture quality wise. The 750 is far from perfect in operation. The finepix F40 is superb indoors, but metering/ graining an issue outdoors. The Panasonic TZ3 loses significant detail owing to over agressive noise supression. The Ricoh Caplio6 has bad fringing etc etc. Agreed! I have seen the shots.
Is it unrealistic for an old film camera enthusiast who favours a 20 year old Minolta to expect much in the way of a few good stills from a digital compact running on auto? Are they all merely ‘ happy snappys’ bristling with electronic features? Face recognition for goodness sake. Time to add movies when they outperform a Hasselblad as far as I am concerned! Meanwhile the pixel count continues to rise which is arguably counter productive quality wise. Are there any professionals out there who can advise please?

Answer: I agree. Nothing like a good decent Honeywell Spotmatic or Minolta SRT101 to get some damn fine photos. (And oooh, how about that Nikon F or Nikkormat? Damn, those were great days!!)

What bugs the **it (my censoring) out of me is the limitations of the zooms on these pocket packs of junk. Who wants to have a low angle of 38mm on their camera? Who decided to have only 38mm as the widest on these cameras?

It’s very hard to find one with a decent 28mm lens on it. I have started using a digital camera, but not for any real photography. Just snap shots around the house, because of the ease of transfering the photos and printing them out. But for real pictures, I still have a 35mm point-n-shoot which works worlds better for quality of picture.

Another excellent place to find Minolta Auto Meter is on Amazon… They have way more than just books!
[phpzon]Minolta Auto Meter, 20, Photo[/phpzon]

Question: Minolta lens compatibility?

Does anyone know if these lenses would be compatible with a Minolta Maxxum 5D DSLR like? I have an opportunity to buy them. They are sold with these cameras. Thanks. Minolta SRT101 (SLR) (match-needle metering) Minolta XE-7 (SLR) (features auto exposure, exposure override, double exposure provision and the Copal-Leitz vertical travel shutter) Spiratone: 20mm Super Wide Angle (2.8 – 16) Minolta MC W. Rokkor: 28mm (f/2.5-16) Minolta MD Rokkor X 50mm NORMAL (f/1.8 – 16) Minolta 50mm MACRO (f/3.5-22) complete with extension tube Minolta MD Rokkor X 58mm normal large aperture (f/1.2 – 22) Minolta 28mm-85mm ZOOM (f/3.5-22) Minolta MD Rokkor X 85mm TELPHOTO / Portrait (f/2.0-22) Dimension 135mm telephoto lens (f/3.5-22) Minolta 250mm telephoto MIRROR (f/5.6) Tokina 80mm-200mm Zoom (f/4-22)

Answer: The good old Minolta MC and MD lenses are only compatible with Minolta manual focus film cameras. Therefore, they are so cheap, are available.

We hope you found this page on Minolta Auto Meter useful… In case you didn”t find what you were after, give the search box above a try! (It”s amazingly intuitive.)

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