hiddengamer7
Well-Known Member
I bet you do. I just found another old Olympus camera in my basement, this one had an old Tokina zoom lens and another 50mm F/1.8, I now have like 4 different brands/mounts of nifty fiftys.
when people talk about a "fast" lens, they're referring to maximum aperture size. A bigger aperture allows for a faster shutter speed in the same light. Primes are almost always MUCH faster than telephoto zooms.
cheap setups ftw!Messed around with a cheap strobist setup to do some self-portraits...results later...
sony lures you in with cheap bodies then bends you over for lenses. no offense intended...its just how it is.
now...since you have an alpha/minolta MD mount, you have few options due to the register distance of the lenses (from the rear of the glass to the sensor. too great or little distance messes up the focusing).
i really dont mind manual focus myself...so...if i were you, i'd keep a lookout for sony/minolta brand lenses and pass on sigmas and tamrons, unless the tamron is an adaptall SP.
also, i would avoid most manual focus zooms, since most were the "first" of their kind and not very good. the tamron adaptall SP line of manual zooms are extremely good, though.
i dont know how long you want to go, but here are some 300s
http://cgi.ebay.com/Konica-Minolta-...nses?hash=item2a00ed6049&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14
(most likely a tamron-designed lens) http://cgi.ebay.com/MINOLTA-MD-TELE...nses?hash=item35a366bc4a&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14
you also might have to check around the net to make sure your camera can meter with no electronic connection to the lens.
