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I think its great if you need it for still images like moon and astrophotography. I used it with my canon T6s and the new 55-250 mm lens and got a Great result with Moon photos. The image was still was sharp as you can see here. The image was cropped but never enhanced in lightroom, so if you enhance it it might look sharper than that. Its a great purchase if you want good quality astrophotography and youre on low budget. I paid $100 for it, probably a price of $65 - 70$ would be more reasonable. I gave it 4 stars because the autofocus doesnt work as advertised (kept going back and forth and never focused) and the mounting is not very smooth. Otherwise its a great teleconverter. Image capture settings: 250 mm (x2 -> 500 mm), f/8, 1/80s. ISO 100
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When I purchased it I knew it would have limitation, and I was willing to accept these. It has no functionality, and requires that you know what youre doing --- I believe that with my 35+ years of photography I would fall into that category. The fist obstacle was that the bellow seemed not stay in the position I set it to ...... well after reading some other reviews I noticed that the set-screw was not attached .... it was somewhere in the plastic bag in which the bellow was delivered .... So, the manufacture removes the set screw so that the package can be 5mm smaller ..... sorry this is not acceptable. I used / tested the bellow with a Canon 80D with battery grip ..... well that did not work because of the size of the battery grip. So I inserted a macro extender between the cameras body and the bellow to increase the distance and allow the bellow to be connected to the body - after all that would just add more extension and thus give additional distance to the lens. I then tested the bellow with a few lenses: Canon EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM, Tamron Auto Focus 18-270mm f/3.5-6.3 VC, Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II and a Canon EF 180mm f3.5L Macro USM. While I was able to get pictures (in manual mode off course), the operation was very cumbersome --- and most importantly --- especially with the Canon lenses -- the lenses would come off way too easy of the bellow, as the bellows lens-side does not have any security lock. Normally the lens is connected to the body, or extender and in order to release the lens the release button needs to be pressed --- not with the bellow. Sorry, but Im not risking having a $1000 lens falling down just because this bellow is not having this STANDARD feature. Stay away from the this inferior product and dont waste your time.
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Bought it for my Canon Rebel SL1 and works perfectly with the stock 18-55mm IS STM EF-S & optional 55-250mm IS STM EF-S lens. Completely locks into the camera body, both lens lock in all the way and all contacts are making the connection. IS and AF works perfectly. Turns my 250mm into a 500mm and really dont need a tripod because the IS feature still works. Pics come out sharp, perfect. Really no loss in resolution when you edit, zooming in and cropping. I use it on sunny days taking pictures of birds & other small critters. Fantastic resolution, colors in detail. Noticed all the others only work with the EF and not the EF-S series of lens. This one does both, perfectly. Fantastic price too. Ordered it on a late Saturday and was in my mail box early Monday morning. As always, Amazon has great shipping.
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This is one of my main photography tools now. I coupled this teleconverter with a 55-250mm IS lens and it does a wonderful job! I use this teleconverter on a crop sensor SL1 (100d) and it functions perfectly. The only complaint I have with it is that autofocus only works in live view, however IS and all other settings work perfectly! love this thing! Full metal Construction too.
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I, like most other people who get this, have a few FD lenses left over from my film days and want to put those things to work! I am very happy with the construction and fit (all metal, no wobbling or twist). Installation to the lens was a little tricky but, once installed, fit to the camera body was nice and easy with a firm *click* once in place. I use both the built-in aperture ring and the lens aperture, depending on my situation. To achieve accurate focus, I found it necessary to focus while WIDE OPEN. This helps to eliminate the false focus while within the images DOF. Focus, compose, close and shoot. Setting mode dial to Av but keep in mind that you lose about 1 stop due to the adapting optics (Exposure Compensation to +1 helped in some situations) and I notice some CA/color fringing due to them as well (somewhat correctable in post-processing and no impact at all when going for monochrome). The optics ARE removable, Im just not sure how. I also got an Ef-S focusing screen and a third-party split-prism focusing screen. The Ef-S screen helps focus by making out-of-focus areas MORE out-of-focus, and gives a more accurate depiction of depth-of-field (particularly useful for f/2.8 or faster lenses). The split-prism screen simulates the screen that we USED to have in our film cameras. My lens being f/4, I found the Ef-S screen to be most helpful but (if you have a faster lens) you should do just fine with any screen. Giving 4 stars because of the CA and poor instructions, but I am overall very happy to have made this purchase.
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BEFORE YOU PUT THIS ON YOUR LENS: carefully tighten the tiny screw that keeps the little release tab from flexing sideways. If you don’t this will get stuck on your lens and you’ll be using dental picks and sewing needles for hours trying to dislodge it. That’s what happened to me. After getting it off and tightening the screw so the lever/tab would actuate freely—but not flex—this thing worked great. I can now use a bunch of (1960s-1970s) Nikkor/Nikon/Nikkormat lenses on my new Canon T2i. Yes, it will let you use those ancient lenses with the crazy bayonet prong thingy sticking up that used to fork into the SLR prism meters of the old film cameras. The short answer: Yes, this adapter let me use old Nikon/Nikkor lenses on my Canon. They were really old lenses and most had that weird f/stop meter fork prong sticking up from the f/stop ring. I’m very happy with this purchase. This worked with these old lenses I happened to have lying around, which I’ll list because some online sources say some of this won’t/will fit on digital cameras, but if it’s an old Nikkor it probably will work with this adapter onto your Canon Body. Here’s what I had that worked: Now the really LONG answer with all sorts of cautions, opinions, etc. that you may or may not find interesting or useful: WARNING #1: BEFORE YOU PUT THIS ON A NIKON/NIKKOR/NIKKORMAT LENS make sure that the screw that holds the little black lever tab on is tight! If it’s loose the lever tab will flex sideways and not really go up and down so then it won’t pull the pin upward, which will jam this adapter onto your lens. This happened to me and the little pin had to be pulled up with a dental pick and an xacto blade while unscrewing the adapter (righty loosey!). So: test to make sure the release pin moves up and down with no sideways play. Once off the lens (it worked fine on the other 5) I used lock tight on the tiny screw and tightened it. I made sure it was still loose enough that the black lever-tab could operate the locking pin up and down. Eventually I’m going to get one of these for each of my 6 Nikkor lenses along with 6 Canon endcaps (because with the adapter on the rear of the lens it is Canon size now and the old Nikon endcaps wouldn’t fit anymore). WARNING #2 WHAT LENSES CAN I USE: well, pretty much anything that has the 54-year-old-and-still- in-use Nikon ‘F’ mount. Nikon/Nikkor/Nikkormat SLR cameras have been using the same mount since 1959, so if you have an ancient lens for these film cameras there’s a pretty darn good chance this ring will let you use them on your Canon. By the way: none of my lenses actually said "F" or "F Mount" on them: they had all sorts of other letters. F is the mounting system, not the lens type/name. BUT YOU MUST BE CAREFUL!! A few of the old Nikkor lenses had a crazy metal tab that sticks about an 1” into the camera. These will NOT work—unless you use a dremel tool to cut that tab off, then it’ll work fine. If you don’t cut that huge tab off then it will smash into your mirror. I’m NOT talking about the little black metal tabs that are on many of these lenses and look like tiny nubby cute rabbit ears like upside down ‘L’s; or the low black or chrome curved ridges on the rear of the lenses—these are usually fine to have. Most of my lenses had two or three rabbit ear tabs and worked fine. You can’t even see them when the adapter is on. The thing you DO have to be careful of is a (rare) SHARP & HUGE ‘L’ thing with the top of the ‘L’ poking into the camera body. . If you have a huge ‘L’ shaped tab that sticks past the adapter and into the camera: STOP! You need to remove that tab. Also, I’ve read of some of the older lenses had really big curved flanges—like a shark fin that would have to be dremeled off. I can only speak to the 6 lenses I tried. Mine just had normal flanges (black and chrome) and plastic rings and spikey blocky things, but no huge shark fins. Your mileage will vary. MAKE SURE NOTHING WILL HIT YOUR MIRROR OR THE ELECTRICAL CONTACTS OF YOUR CAMERA BODY. A few Nikon lenses have a really tall fin/flange that goes almost all the way around. These may have to be removed as well. It should be pretty obvious if you’ve got a lens that will need grinding. Maybe I just lucked out with half-a-dozen that worked with no grinding. It should be really obvious and I don’t mean to make anyone paranoid. Personally, I’m not in the mood to grind anything, so if I dig up a lens with a tall ‘L’ or a huge shark fin flange, I’m probably just not going to use it—unless it’s one of the huge flanges that is screwed on: then I’d take it off and try. To be clear: ALL these old lenses will have LITTLE tabs and ears sticking out of them. It’s just any huge ones that would hit your mirror that could be a problem. Looking online it seems *most* old Nikkor lenses don’t have these huge tabs anyway. MY EXPERIENCE: With the adapter on each of my lenses NOTHING stuck past the adapter going into the camera Happily, NONE of the 6 mega-old lenses I got from a family member had any really tall tabs or flanges or L-thingies that interfered with fitment. I had three old Nikon film SLR camera bodies (F body, EM body and a Nikkormat body) with six old lenses that worked interchangeably with them all. Since 1959 Nikon has used the ‘F-mount’ system on their SLRs, so there are many Nikon lenses in the world that will fit your Canon with this adapter. I have a Canon T2i. MOUNTING: remember that RIGHTY IS LOOSEY on Nikon F-mount lenses! A major source of irritation if you’re used to righty tighty. Oh, and many of the lenses have all sorts of letters on them—none actually said ‘F’ or ‘F Mount’ on them, so yours probably won’t either. The adapter fits VERY tight onto the lenses-and NORMAL tight onto the Canon body. It’s so tight on the lens that you’ll probably end up buying one for each lens so you can just leave them on—which is since you’re probably not going to put them back on your old Nikon film camera anyway (ie, the reason you’re shopping for adapters in the first place). Once in place it goes on/off the Canon body like any Canon lens. Nice and easy and clicks into place. YES IT WORKS: old Nikkor/Nikon/Nikormat lenses, even the ones with that crazy metering/fstop FORK thing on the top/outside work just fine! My ancient 1960s-80s Nikkor lenses fit on the Canon and the camera meters through them. I’ve noticed that the faster (f1.8) Nikkor lenses overexpose slightly on auto-everything. Fine: it’s a DSLR, just adjust your exposure and see what you get. I also bought an adapter like this one that lets me use my old Olympus OM Zuiko lenses from the 70s and the fast f1.8 50mm Olympus lens also overexposes a little. The 500mm telephoto and the slower lenses meter fine using auto-everything on the Canon (I used the silver rectangle with the line through it showing “no-flash” selected on the rotating knob of the Canon). F/STOP: my Nikkor lenses all stopped down (depth-of-field preview mode) because nothing on the camera or adapter hits the old lens levers ~that’s a GREAT thing, you can use different f/stops instead of just wide open because of this. The bigger the f/stop you dial in the darker the view is and the larger the depth-of-field. I like that. I don’t have to hold down any depth-of-field preview button or anything. I just get the f/stop I want by turning the ring on the lens, focus by turning the other ring on the lens and snapping a photo. Some people might have a problem with this: the larger the f/stop number the darker the view is, which makes it harder to manually focus properly. When you use these lenses on old film cameras there is a lever that opens the f/stop until the shutter is tripped (or if you held down the depth-of-field preview button either on the lens or the camera body depending on the brand)—which is why the view wouldn’t darken on film cameras no matter what f/stop you chose (although some lenses didn’t have this feature and still would show a darker view depending on f/stop). Anyway: this is a good thing. You see what your f/stop choice does to your focus and since the Canon can meter with these old lenses everything comes out fine in the end. My Tamron 500m for Olympus is like that: no matter if I put it on a film SLR or a DSLR the f/stop changes the brightness and depth of field you see while looking through the lens and trying to focus-there is no non-preview mode. I’ve read (but not sure if true) that even though most Nikon DSLRs will mount old “F’ mount lenses SOME Nikon DSLRs supposedly cannot METER through them. That doesn’t sound like fun. NO IT WON’T AUTOFOCUS: my Nikon lenses are so old they didn’t autofocus in the first place, so this wasn’t an issue. There is no sensor on this adapter, so you don’t get any sort of autofocus confirmation either. Again, my lenses were from early 70s so they never did that in the first place. Some of these types of adapters will have a circuit board thingy on them for use with newer lenses: you still have to manually focus, but the camera will notify you when you’ve achieved focus by blinking a light or something. I’ve read that these can and do burn out after a while anyway—so I went with this cheapy adapter. Even if I did have lenses with some electronic features I wouldn’t want them communicating with my nice new camera body through a cheap adapter and possibly shorting something out: but who knows, maybe they work awesome. The only autofocus lenses I own are the ones that came with the new Canon T2i kit. All the old Nikkors (and others) I have lying around are manual focus to begin with. FOCUS: some lenses (possibly) won’t be in focus at infinity if you dial the focus ring all the way out. I didn’t have that issue, but I’ve read that you just focus all the way out, and then *in* a little and you’re fine. So, no biggie there: look with your eyes—either it’s focused or not. WHY DO THIS? Because the Canon T2i (and probably other EOS bodies) meter through anything you can adapter-ring or duct tape onto the front of them you can use totally awesome lenses that you can find ultra-cheap online or even at garage sales. You can buy a box of expensive “film camera” lenses for five bucks and laugh when they ask you “film is dead, what are you going to do with those old lenses?” Adapt them! I spent a lot of money in the past on nice lenses, and with a few cheap adapters I can re-use them on my Canon. Since Canon’s *video* is considered by many to be better than some of Nikon’s models (no wavy jellybeany video while panning, manual controls, longer HD record time, 1080 HD, etc.) you’ll find lots of people shooting VIDEO with Nikon/Nikkor lenses on Canon Bodies. Why-it looks great and is lots of fun! IN SUMMARY: -Righty loosey, lefty tighty with Nikon lenses. -Make sure the black lever tap pulls the pin upward, if not: tighten the screw *before* jamming it onto a lens; or, buy an adapter for every lens you have and just leave them on (and then get CANON rear dustcaps—not Nikon—for the rear of each lens). -Make sure nothing is sticking past the adapter and then they’re be nothing to poke your mirror and break it. -My six lenses (listed) worked just fine. Your mileage may vary due to manufacturing changes over the decades. -It’s nice to be able to use old expensive lenses again for cheap. Now you can hunt around your parent’s/grandparent’s basement and double or triple the amount of lenses you have. -IT IS A LOT OF (CHEAP) FUN! -Look around for other old lenses: Canon’s have adapters for tons of other manufacturer’s lenses (like Olympus OM Zuiko). I spent a measly few bucks on a couple adapters and all of a sudden I’ve got almost two dozen (very high optical quality) lenses for my new Canon DSLR for very little money. I took a star off for the 45 minutes of worry and dental-picking to get it off the first time it jammed. After that it was smooth sailing. If I had tightened the screw BEFORE jamming it on a lens I probably would still have given this 4 stars just for the ‘ify’ design of the release lever. Cheers, Mike from Detroit
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I would give it negative stars if I could. Do NOT purchase this adapter!!! I used it on my Canon Rebel T5i with old F-Mount Sigma lenses and it either got stuck to the camera or the lens each time I took it off. I ripped apart my hand trying to remove it. Since the mounts twist the opposite ways, the adapter twists with it so focusing and zooming are close to impossible. It took me over two hours trying different things to take it off my lens. If you are having the issue, you have to use tweezers to push down the little black lever. This was very poorly designed. Its 100% worth buying a better one for twice the cost. Dont ruin your lenses or your cameras with this!!!
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Lets be honest -- this puts cheap glass in the optical path so a picture can be taken. The quality is not great glass — its cheap glass. The point is to be able to use good lenses with good cameras that could not otherwise be combined. In my case, Im using Rokkor-X Leica glass on my Canon 70D. More specifically, Im using a top notch Minolta macro lens, plus a very nice Minolta 1.2 50mm lens. The low quality glass give effects of softness that can be "arty" and bring a cachet to the image that is serendipitous and engaging. Ive obtained some excellent images, none of which are critically sharp, because cheap glass. So if you buy this with the right level of expectation, youll be pleased and have a new set of tools in your arsenal, and some fine lenses wont wind up in landfill. One real caution: One CAN remove the glass and make the lenses that are "adapted" focus short of infinity and with the benefit of zero.zero degradation of the image. However, when you remove the unit containing the glass, the glass segments fall apart. Any alignment (laugh) is lost, and you now have dust and fingerprints on the glass when you put it back together. So, dont.
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This thing works great for adapting the lens.... that said there are a few things everyone should know... Heres a little insight into my photography background/ kit so you know that I am reviewing this from a semi professional opinion. Right now I own a Canon 5d Mark iii, a 5d mark ii, a 70d and a rebel t5 it worked on all of them. I typically shoot macro things, portraits, events, weddings, and city landscapes. I own an array of gear from vintage to modern, i received mine last Thursday and played with it all weekend. 1. Some vintage fd lenses have issues locking on to the adapter, mainly third party lenses i.e. Vivatar and Quantry 2. THE PRO ONLY GIVES FOCUS CONFIRMATION, NOT AUTO FOCUS!!! (i saw a lot of reviews that were lower because of no auto focus lol) 3. I put a 50mm 1.4 on this bad boy and had to stop it down to at least f2.8, depending on the situstion you can try f2 or f2.5 (the in between f stop) to get a sharp image. 4. This is my most important point and the reason i am only giving the PRO version 3 stars.... The dang chip came off after 5 days of use... i could have saved a few bucks... I love this thing its a lot of fun and i plan on taking it on a trip to Florida next week, that said i wish i the gluing of the chip was better, i tried to put it back on but i dont think i lined it up properly... oh well i will take the 13 dollar loss and just use it as an adapter for my collection of fd lenses.
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I bought this to use with my Canon 75--300 zoom lens and Canon EOS20D camera. I have used it with manual focus (mostly because I forgot it could be used in autofocus mode) but with bird photos, in trees, focus can be tricky. Im new to photographing birds--most move so quickly, especially the warblers, that I feel lucky to get a half-way decent shot at all. Ive used this extensively on a week-long trip to Padre Island, TX. I photographed shore birds and wading birds and ducks, esp. at Leonabelle Turnbull Birding Center, and was very pleased with the sharpness of my shots in good lighting conditions. With any teleconvertor, low light conditions are tough, so it would be best to remove it for those shots. I didnt do this, but recommend you buy a cap, which costs extra, to protect the top when youre not using it. Ill get one, but shipping costs almost as much as the cap, so I guess Ill make do with a ziplock bag until I have another order to place. Ive had to learn how to disengage the lens from the teleconverter--theres a fat button that you push away from the lens. It isnt intuitive, but not a problem once youve figured it out. This has also been useful to use on my shorter lens, too. It gives you a lot of flexibility for a very reasonable price. I have no issues with the quality of this product, but cant comment on the autofocus feature, as I havent given it a trial yet.
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