William Robb wrote:


----- Original Message ----- From: "Jostein"
Subject: Re: Temporarily enabled with 2.8/70-200mm




Very true. However, the Canon EOS lenses does not have an aperture ring, and neither does many nikon lenses. I don't know exactly why C and N have eliminated them, but it could be a sign in time for the future of the K-mount.


Canon removed the aperture ring when they went to the EOS system because they came up with a 100% electronic interface between camera and lens. The aperture is driven by an electric motor, not a spring. The Canon rep told me (sorry, not compelling evidence, just anecdotal) that they felt accuracy and reliability would be improved by eliminating moving parts, as much as possible, and that in the long run, it would be cheaper for manufacture and, consequently, for the consumer to purchase.

I don't know about Nikon's reasoning, but it is probably similar.

William Robb


Nikon's was pure cost reduction, as only the meter coupling was eliminated, the aperture stop-down is still mechanical, just like on the DA and FA J lenses from Pentax. It does make for a good compatibility differentiator for VR lenses, as VR compatible bodies all set the aperture on-body anyways.

-Adam

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