taylorcurry
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Is it really worth it? I have the standard adapter but am curious if the Focal Reducer for the Mamiya 645 to GFX is really worth all that cash...?
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The Kipon adapter you're talking about is to L full frame -- the OP wants to Fuji GFX 50S.I have a reasonable quantity of Mamiya 645 lenses and a Panasonic S1 camera body. I looked at the price of the Kipon M645-L focal reduction adapter and wished that it were a lot cheaper.
This line in the listing would give me cause for concern:Is it really worth it? I have the standard adapter but am curious if the Focal Reducer for the Mamiya 645 to GFX is really worth all that cash...?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/133072597244
Yes I was aware of that fact but knew that Kipon made a whole range of focal reduction adapters for Mamiya M645 mount lenses. They are all much of a muchness in price as we might expect for special build low volume bespoke adapters of that type. The price certainly keeps them from being more popular and I can reasonably presume that the market was not very big to start with.The Kipon adapter you're talking about is to L full frame -- the OP wants to Fuji GFX 50S.I have a reasonable quantity of Mamiya 645 lenses and a Panasonic S1 camera body. I looked at the price of the Kipon M645-L focal reduction adapter and wished that it were a lot cheaper.
I respect your experience and erudition and am sure that you are right.I wouldn't be shocked if a FF focal reducer still covered the 44x33mm sensor in the Fuji, but I don't think anybody (aside from Bav Eyes, although they say it vignettes, so I think it's really to FF with a mount swap) is commercially making focal reducers targeting 44x33mm sensors. Pitty; there are not many wide MF lenses. However, a focal reducer like that would have a tiny market... because there are 645, 6x6, 6x7, etc. lenses in a variety of mounts, so it's not clear what mount and level of reduction you'd really want to support.
My personal take is that the 44x33mm sensors are really multi-aspect FF, not MF, and I think a surprising number of FF lenses will cover acceptably....
This is interesting Dave. Up until now I just had a vague notion that Kipon made a version of their focal reduction adapter M645-GFX. I have no interest in owning a medium format mirrorless camera as I think I am already very over-invested in photographic kit.This line in the listing would give me cause for concern:Is it really worth it? I have the standard adapter but am curious if the Focal Reducer for the Mamiya 645 to GFX is really worth all that cash...?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/133072597244
5. Notice:this adapter has slight or heavy vignetting on GFX camera,it depends on lens
It is a shift/rotate only. But if you further adapt EF-M4/3 there is a neat twist to tilt adapter that can add tilt as well.I would not worry about the reducer, just live with the crop. Or, if you really want to have some fun get the Kipon Shift adapter, I think it comes with tilt too.
Use your lens as a shift lens or shift/stitch to get about 33mm x 60mm or 44mm x 56mm. By shifting/stitching you use the majority of the image circle and get much larger image files.
I use two medium format lenses on my 5DSR with the Kipon M645 to EF adapter.
Absolutely not...For one thing that is an optical adapter, so the additional elements in line will reduce image quality (they always do), and secondly you can make your own non optical M645 to G mount adapter out of an old M645 extension ring for a tiny fraction of the cost.Is it really worth it? I have the standard adapter but am curious if the Focal Reducer for the Mamiya 645 to GFX is really worth all that cash...?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/133072597244

Yes, and there's one other thing that never ever saw mentioned. With the focal reducer, you also have a lot less stray light. When using larger format lenses on smaller lenses, the amount of light not falling on the sensor will have to bounce until absorved and this reduces contrast, often very significantly.Absolutely not...For one thing that is an optical adapter, so the additional elements in line will reduce image quality (they always do), and secondly you can make your own non optical M645 to G mount adapter out of an old M645 extension ring for a tiny fraction of the cost.Is it really worth it? I have the standard adapter but am curious if the Focal Reducer for the Mamiya 645 to GFX is really worth all that cash...?
https://www.ebay.com/itm/133072597244
The flange focal distance (FFD) of M645 is 63.3mm but G-mount's FFD is only 26.7mm, or 36.6mm difference.
I made an M645 to SA mount adapter (63.3 FFD to to 44mm FFD) from a M645 No.1 extension ring, with the M645 mounting plate removed from the base and an SA mounting plate screwed onto the base instead. That is a 19.3mm difference in FFD and the extension ring is 11.8mm deep, so that gave me 7.5mm to play around with to get the infinity focus spot on, which was a doddle.
For the Fujifilm GFX's the M645 No.2 extension ring would be more suitable...It is 23.6mm deep with the M645 mount still on the base, or 3.1mm less than the FFD of the G mount, so with it removed and a G mounting plate screwed on you should be able to wangle infinity with it no problem, with no image quality robbing optical elements in the way. You can pick up used M645 No2 extension rings in mint condition for under $10 on ebay!...For example:
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/165092365151?hash=item267045935f:g:ET4AAOSwzDBhT8us
Then you just have to find yourself a G mounting plate...Taking one off a G lens is obviously not a cheap option but maybe you could get one off an lens mount adapter for the G-mount for a relatively low cost.
Come to think of it though, you can already get an M645 to G mount adapter for about £50 bucks on ebay which obviously negates having to make one...I had no choice though as it was impossible to buy a commercially made M645-SA mount adapter.
BTW, the sharpest M645 lens, is also the cheapest M645 lens...It's the M645 80mm f2.8N, which is basically a kit lens, but on SA mount in front of an APS-C sensor it's one of the sharpest lenses I have ever used. I have also tried the 45mm f2.8N, and the 210mm f4N too but they were very soft in comparison, so I got rid of them and just kept the 80mm.
There is a faster M645 80mm 1.9 available but it costs a lot more....You can get an good f2.8 for under 200 bucks if you shop around, but f1.9's start at over 370 bucks.