Interited Lenses

Daily, Geeky August 29th, 2009

It’s midnight and I’m writing a new entry while watching a Saturday evening EPL match in downtown Bangkok. It was an exhaustive but fun day. I met my high-school friends at Siam Paragon for lunch, watched G.I. Joe (and I may recommend it to anyone who’s looking for something not contentious). Then we went for Golf driving site near Ekkamai. It was my first time to hold the bat, nevertheless I managed to drive the balls almost 100 yards at the end of the day thanks to my experienced friend. It was enjoyable and we’re looking forward to play these shots again.

Anyway, a few days ago I went over some drawers to explore a collection of my dad’s lenses he obtained 20 plus years ago. They are unarguably ancient, but mostly in immaculate conditions. I’m gonna nick a few as he no longer into photography any more.

Let’s start with the body. I remembered him using this taking family photos when I was young before he later possessed several non-slr automatic film cameras.  From labels on the camera, I believe it’s a first generation Nikon FE.  According to the production date on wikipedia, it should be about 30 years old.

 

Nikon FE

Attached to it is the nikon 43-86mm f3.5, that I haven’t tested.

This long ancient-looking lens is a tamron made, 85-210mm (why zoom ranges of these old lenses are so strange?).

tamron 85-210mm

My dad seems to quite like Tamron as he’s got another Tamron lens.  This one, though, is a prime, 24mm f2.5.

Tamron 24mm f3.5These Tamron lenses are unlike new Tamrons that readily mount to Nikon, they require an adaptall (not a typo, they are called ‘adaptall’ on the box) to mount them on Nikon bodies.

Let’s move to a more interesting one, this one is the Nikon 50mm f1.4.  I would expect this one to be ideal for low-light conditions.

Nikon 50mm f1.4I mounted this one on my Nikon d4o and quickly took a trial shot (of my dad).  To be truthful, given how old it is, the result impresses me.

Nikon 50mm f1.4 trial shot

Ok, the last lens.  I guess this one is the newest in his collection, Nikon 16mm Fisheye f2.8.  It’s the only AF one.  This means that I don’t have to manually set the aperture (it doesn’t auto focus on my body still).  Surprisingly, I found it still in production nowsaday.

Nikon 16mm AF Fisheye f2.8

Aesthetically, it’s pristine.  Unfortunatelly, when it took some test shots, it revealed foggy and blurry images.  This implies that this lens needs thorough and proper cleaning.  I will call Nikon Thailand on Monday to inquire about the possibility.

Nikon 16mm AF Fisheye f2.8 test shotsNikon 16mm AF Fisheye f2.8 test shots

The reason of choosing a bathroom as a location is solely to see how wide the lens is, nothing else!

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The Last Day

Daily, Geeky August 22nd, 2009

Yesterday (Friday) was my last day at GSK.
In fact, my line manager, the person who interviewed me in, assigned me works and looked after me, wasn’t in. He had gone for a conference in Istanbul for the whole week. However his colleagues (well technically my colleagues too) took me out to a lovely pub and treated me a nice lunch (and I was stuffed =) ). I was, undoubtedly, very impressed. Those were 8 weeks of an unforgettable experience.

What I actually want to tell is, they know that I’m a physicist, I’m from Cambridge and my work was programming-related. These may take an important role when they were finding me a leaving work gift.

I was given two books, one from all other colleagues, and one from my line manager. Here is the first one.
SevenWondersoftheIndustrialWorld
Haven’t read it, but it’s definitely something scientific. Could be a good read.

Right, this is the second one, from my line manager, who supposedly knows me better than others.
TheGeekAtlas
Umm, well, you are not telling me I’m a geek, are you?

The book catches my attention though, I’ve read a couple pages. Basically, they are all bout selected science-related places all over the world. The format is, the background info on a place, some related theories, equations and a little visitor.
I found many places I even never heard of, they are not just science museums. Though, I know almost all theories and technical stuffs in the book. Still, I swear, I’m not that geeky. Please don’t call me geek after all.

Oh, one more thing. I’m flying back home on Monday, so I got to temporarily stop watching Air Crash Investigation otherwise I might freak out on the plane.

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