Specificaties
Focal Length
T-Stop
Close Focus
Front Diameter
Weight
Coverage
Focus Rotation
Mount
14mm
T2.0
0.23 m
Ø 114 mm
1520 g
S35
270º
PL
18mm
T1.3
0.25 m
Ø 80 mm
1265 g
S35
270º
PL
25mm
T1.3
0.25 m
Ø 80 mm
940 g
S35
270º
PL
35mm
T1.3
0.37 m
Ø 80 mm
820 g
S35
270º
PL
50mm
T1.3
0.68 m
Ø 80 mm
805 g
S35
270º
PL
85mm
T1.3
0.88 m
Ø 80 mm
1055 g
S35
270º
PL
Inbegrepen
- ZEISS Standard Speed Mk II 14mm T2.0
- ZEISS Super Speed Mk III 18mm T1.3
- ZEISS Super Speed Mk III 25mm T1.3
- ZEISS Super Speed Mk III 35mm T1.3
- ZEISS Super Speed Mk III 50mm T1.3
- ZEISS Super Speed Mk III 85mm T1.3
Transport
- Lemsford Flight Case (Super Speed MK3)
Productinformatie
The most sought after of the Zeiss Super Speeds – the elusive MkIII. With the popularity and rarity of the Mk III Super Speeds, you’d think there’s some special, magical upgrade that makes them infinitely better than the Mk II… You’d be wrong. Similar to the previous enhancements, the ONLY upgrade from the Mk II to Mk III is the focus scale orientation. That’s right. The focus marks on the older Mk II are in-line with the lens body which means when you mount them to a camera, the focus marks are sideways. Zeiss took the advice of users around the world and updated the focus scales on the Mk III by increasing the font size and rotating the engravings 90° to orient the focus marks upright when the lens is mounted to the camera. In fact, this was something of a down-grade to some. Since the focus marks were larger and more legible, there was no more room for the dual-unit focus scale, meaning the lenses either came with a Metric OR Imperial scale, but not both. This final revision came about in the mid 90’s which enjoyed a relatively short production run.