mcgarity Posted December 11, 2004 Share Posted December 11, 2004 The mailman just delivered a Nikkor to EOS adapter I recently purchased from Fotodiox. I bought it so that I could mount a Nikkor 105mm f2.8 macro on an EOS body. The lens mated easily to the adapter. That combo mated easily to a 300D. A couple of casual test shots revealed that this setup does work and it does focus to infinity. So far so good. The problem is I cannot for the life of me see how the adapter comes off of the lens once the two are mated. There is no release mechanism I can find and so far it appears once the two are joined, they are joined solidly. I am stumped. I would like to take them apart but I hesitate to get too agricultural at this stage. I could leave the adapter on the lens forever, but that seems to be a poor solution to the problem. If anyone shed light on the proper proceedure I would be grateful. Thanks in advance. Larry Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digitmstr Posted December 11, 2004 Share Posted December 11, 2004 I have a Phayee adapter and it comes off the lens just like a "real" lens would come off a Nikon body. However, for example, the extension tubes have an actual spring lock that needs to be released for the lens to come off. I don't think your adapter would have any such mechanism as it would be too thick. Take the lens off the EOS and then see what's going on. Was it very tight to put on the lens? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcgarity Posted December 11, 2004 Author Share Posted December 11, 2004 Giampiero I have tried it taking them apart while mounted on the camera and tried with them off. I have had no luck either way. They lens mounted to the adapter very easily. Everything about the Nikkor seems to be exactly opposite of what I am used to with Canon EOS and FD. I know I have to be doing something basically stupid. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jeffcallen Posted December 11, 2004 Share Posted December 11, 2004 I have the same photodiox nikon-EOS adapter you have. There's a small 1/4 inch sized tab of metal with a small hole in it. It is on the lens flange. You can push this tab in slightly and then rotate the mount off of the lens. It took me a few minutes to figure this out too. Good luck! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
henry_dorsett2 Posted December 11, 2004 Share Posted December 11, 2004 I have the same adapter from Photodiox. With the lens off the camera, I can access the small locking tab on the adapter. Pull it back, and the pin that locks into the lens recess will also pull back, and then turn the adapter (just as though the adapter was the camera lens mount). You can't remove the lens from the adapter while mounted on the camera, however - take the lens off the camera first. HD Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcgarity Posted December 11, 2004 Author Share Posted December 11, 2004 Henry and Jeff. Thank you very much gentlemen. Once you know how to do it, its easy. But its not exactly self obvious. Be nice if they added a small instructional sheet. Larry Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digitmstr Posted December 12, 2004 Share Posted December 12, 2004 Remember that Nikon sutff unscrews by turning it the OPPOSITE direction than all the other items. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digitmstr Posted December 12, 2004 Share Posted December 12, 2004 As a side note: I have now decided to leave the adapters on all my 3rd party lenses and just get Canon rear caps for them. I found that while adding a bit to the cost it makes for much faster lens changes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mcgarity Posted December 12, 2004 Author Share Posted December 12, 2004 I was thinking of doing the same thing Giampiero. It would be painfully slow to swap things around. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Crowe Posted December 12, 2004 Share Posted December 12, 2004 Make that three of us. At the moment I have just one Nikon lens but if I get more I may purchase adapters for them all. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jsbc Posted December 12, 2004 Share Posted December 12, 2004 It's easier to leave the adapters on. I have Nikkor primes and I use them interchangably with EOS lenses. This is better than the old M42-Pentax adapters which is a pain to remove from the camera bodies. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kelly_flanigan1 Posted December 12, 2004 Share Posted December 12, 2004 The lower trier XYZ to ABC adapters often are made a tad thinner; so one can always focus on infinity. This is to drop the costs; with looser tolerances. The combo will "focus past infinity" ie infinity is really inboard on the focusing scale; say maybe where a 100 ft mark might on a 50mm lens. The higher end adapters migh cost double or triple; but are ground and adjusted to be spot on. There are a mess of EOS to XYZ adapters; made in Russia; China; and elsewhere. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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