Panagor Auto Tele 400mm F/5.6 [PMC]
Super telephoto prime lens • Film era • Discontinued
Specification
Optical design: | |
35mm full frame | |
400mm | |
F/5.6 | |
5 elements in 3 groups | |
Canon FD [42mm] | |
Contax/Yashica [45.5mm] | |
Konica AR [40.5mm] | |
M42 [45.5mm] | |
Minolta SR [43.5mm] | |
Nikon F [46.5mm] | |
Olympus OM [46mm] | |
Pentax K [45.5mm] | |
6.2° (35mm full frame) | |
On Nikon D APS-C [1.53x] cameras: | |
35mm equivalent focal length: | 612mm (in terms of field of view) |
35mm equivalent speed: | F/8.6 (in terms of depth of field) |
Diagonal angle of view: | 4° |
On Pentax K APS-C [1.53x] cameras: | |
35mm equivalent focal length: | 612mm (in terms of field of view) |
35mm equivalent speed: | F/8.6 (in terms of depth of field) |
Diagonal angle of view: | 4° |
Diaphragm mechanism: | |
Diaphragm type: | Automatic |
Aperture control: | Aperture ring (with or without Auto Exposure setting) |
<No data> | |
Focusing: | |
6m | |
<No data> | |
Focusing modes: | Manual focus only |
Manual focus control: | Focusing ring |
Physical characteristics: | |
1150g (mount not specified) | |
⌀80×250mm (mount not specified) | |
Accessories: | |
Screw-type 72mm | |
Built-in telescopic round | |
<No data> |
Source of data
- Manufacturer's technical data.
Manufacturer description
Excellently corrected telephoto lens of only 25 cm in length. Indispensable for wildlife photographers because it is compact and fast. The PANAGOR 400 mm gives the experienced photographer the opportunity to take pictures of distant subjects by hand. The compressed perspective makes landscape photography interesting, with the shallow depth of field detaching the subject from the background and making it stand out almost three-dimensionally.
Notes
- Independent-brand lenses were made for 35mm film SLR cameras by companies that competed with the camera manufacturers. Some came from factories that made lenses under their own brand names (Angenieux, Kiron, Sigma, Tamron, Tokina). Many others were national and international marketing organizations (Kalimar, Panagor, Rokunar, Soligor, Starblitz) that bought lenses from anonymous manufacturers. One firm — Vivitar — actually designed its own lenses and accessories, which were then subcontracted to manufacturing firms. Still others were private labels, sold only by specific photo specialty shops (Cambron, Quantaray, Spiratone).