I had an A 50/1.7 behaving that way some years back. I have also had an A 24/2.8
that developed the same problem after cleaning and reassembling. With the 24,
the fault was that a small piece insided the bayonet had slid out of position.
My own fault for being tired when I reassebled it after cleaning. Removing the
bayonet and adjusting the fiddly bits solved the problem.

The 50mm was sold to an LX user who didn't mind...:-)

I don't know if the A*200/4 macro is particularly prone to it; my specimen had
behaved nicely for two years since I bought it.

Jostein


Quoting william sawyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> Thanks, Mark. Both Mark Cassino and Ken Waller have this lens and use it
> with their MZ-S's and ist D's, which was why I conferred with them first.
> Still, this is interesting. Gremlins??
> 
> Bill Sawyer
> Livonia, MI
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Erickson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Monday, January 09, 2006 8:05 PM
> To: pentax-discuss
> Subject: A* 200 F4 Macro flaw? (was RE: The Decline of KEH? Long...)
> 
> Bill, 
> 
> Interesting.  I purchased an A* 200 F4 macro lens new from B&H way back in 
> the late 1990's.  I used it in aperture priority or manual mode on my LX 
> until I got an MZ-S, when I discovered that it had the same problem that you
> 
> describe.  Maybe it has an intrinsic design flaw or came from the factory 
> that way?  Hmmmm.  Repair cost me about $100 at a local shop (California 
> Precision Service in Sacramento). 
> 
> Anyway, good luck clearing things up with KEH.... 
> 
>  --Mark 
> 
> 
> 
> 




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