Unigor 6e Type 2. Equipment Goerz Electro Ges. Electronics service manual exchange: schematics,datasheets,diagrams,repairs,schema,service manuals,eeprom bins,pcb as well as service mode.
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For everyone criticizing this lens, just remember there are plenty of people willing to put a plastic Holga lens on their expensive DSLR/Mirrorless cameras to get that 'Cheap plastic camera' look. At least this seems to give decent image quality. The thing that raises my eyebrow is the price. I don't know the first thing about designing a lens, but from my limited knowledge of the subject I'm under the impression that creating a hyperfocal 35mm lens that operates at f8 isn't much of a technical feat, so the price seems a bit much. I could see the appeal of a decent quality lens that does not require any knowledge to get a focused shot but I'm definitely not the target market for such a thing. A theme park/summer camp/etc that has non-photographers taking shots might find this a useful thing.
I'm not hating it, I always point out that there are a huge range of lenses because different people have different needs. That said there are a number of reasons why I don't see it being as useful for me. First is any many lenses can be set to f/8 and taped to a hyper focal distance including a kit zoom or pretty much any 35mm prime lens. So that makes the biggest advantage the size.
If size is important a point-and-shoot or maybe even a camera phone is going to have some advantages in terms of size and weight. Now yes the smaller sensor in these cameras won't have as large photosites and will not be as great in low light as a full frame camera. But you're also going from an f/2.0 or wider lens on these smaller format sensors to f/8 on this lens, cutting the amount of light by 1/16th. Fixed focus lens is not a new concept, it was very popular in the film days. But the cameras that used them tended to be point and shoots or disposable cameras.