Precisely.  I had to write off an A 1:1.7 50mm because of a problem with  
the little springs that control the A setting button.  These parts don't  
exist on the ringless lenses.

Fortunately a nice man from Newcastle took it off my hands.....

John

On Sat, 19 Aug 2006 04:45:42 +0100, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
wrote:

>
> On Aug 18, 2006, at 6:39 PM, Digital Image Studio wrote:
>
>> On 19/08/06, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> A lens without an aperture ring is less likely to break no matter
>>> what you choose to do with it: it has fewer parts to break.
>>
>> Huh? It just doesn't have an aperture ring, the aperture isn't set by
>> magic otherwise.
>
> In a lens without an aperture ring, or in a lens with the aperture
> ring set to A, the lens opening is set by metered action of the
> camera's actuation lever on the lens' iris regulator lever.
>
> Using a lens with an aperture ring set to anything other than A means
> a) the communication contacts to the body are open circuit so there
> are commutators involved, b) the ring controls a limit stop for the
> mechanism internally, the camera actuator simply drops through to its
> minimum aperture setting and the iris regulator comes up against the
> limit stop set by the ring. There are detent fingers, little springs
> operating on notches in the mechanism, the A button and spring for
> it, the connection between the ring and the limit stop, etc.
>
> Yes, a lens without an aperture ring doesn't have an aperture
> ring ... and it doesn't have all the parts associated with the
> aperture ring either. It just has the iris regulator mechanism to
> interact with the camera actuator and a permanently connected set of
> contacts to communicate with the body.
>
> Thus the lens lacking an aperture ring is simpler and likely more
> robust on that basis.
>
> Godfrey
>



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