Nikkor 13mm f/5.6 explained

Nikkor 13mm 5.6[1]
Maker:Nikon
Feat-Is:n
Feat-Usm:n
Feat-Macro:n
Application:Ultra-wide angle prime
Flength:13.3mm
Fov:135 film format
Aperture:5.6 - 22
Groups:12
Elements:16
Diaphragm:7
Close-Dist:0.31NaN1
Weight:1240 g (AI version)
Max-Diameter:115 mm
Max-Length:100 mm (88.5 mm from flange)
Filter:rear bayonet type
Hood:Built in
Case:CL-14
Av-Horiz:108°
Av-Vert:85°
Av-Diag:118° (with 135 film format)
Start:March 1976
Msrp:8,229.00 (1979 price)

The Nikkor 13mm 5.6 is an ultra-wide angle rectilinear lens which was manufactured by Nikon for use on Nikon F mount cameras until 1998. It has been dubbed 'The Holy Grail', for its low-distortion ultra-wide capabilities. The lens was produced by Nikon only upon receipt of an order, thus making it one of the Nikon lenses with the least number manufactured.

Introduction

The lens was prototyped in 1973 and released on an 'order only' basis from March 1976. It was designed by Mr Ikuo Mori, First Optical Section, Optical Designing Department (now retired) and built in Japan.

Features

Construction

Versions

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The world's widest angle of field Tale 9 : Nikkor 13 mm f/5.6. 2011-04-27. 2009. Haruo Sato. NIKKOR - The Thousand and One Nights. Nikon Corporation. https://web.archive.org/web/20120616051226/http://imaging.nikon.com/history/nikkor/9/. 2012-06-16. dead.
  2. Web site: Additional Information on Nikkor 13mm Ultrawideangle lenses. 2009-02-23. 2001. Foo, Lee.