Thanks...I was contemplating this but thought I would check and see if someone else had done what I am proposing and how they did it...I know there can be some spacing concerns with the FF. It is setup properly for the Nikon...Yes it is a mirrorless camera, the Fuji.
Mike J. Shade: mshade@q.com
Mike J. Shade Photography:
mshadephotography.com
In War: Resolution
In Defeat: Defiance
In Victory: Magnanimity
In Peace: Goodwill
Sir Winston Churchill
Already, in the gathering dusk, a few of the stars are turning on their lights.
Vega, the brightest one, is now dropping towards the west. Can it be half
a year since I watched her April rising in the east? Low in the southwest
Antares blinks a sad farwell to fall...
Leslie Peltier, Starlight Nights
International Dark Sky Association: <http://www.darksky.org/> www.darksky.org
From: ap-gto@... [mailto:ap-gto@...]
Sent: Sunday, March 31, 2019 7:12 AM
To: ap-gto@...
Subject: Re: [ap-gto] FujiFilm XT3 adapter
Mike, I have not done this but it seems to me there should be an adapter to use Nikkor lenses on the Fuji camera. If there is, you can put that on the camera body then it would attach just like your Nikon camera did. Possibly with no change in spacers. Is the Fuji camera mirrorless? If so you probably have the back-focus for the adapter to fit without spacers.
Stuart Heggie
http://www.stuartheggie.com/featured.html <http://www.stuartheggie.com>
On Sun, 31 Mar 2019 at 10:04, 'Mike Shade' mshade@q.com [ap-gto] <ap-gto@...> wrote:
Have completely changed terrestrial cameras from Nikon to FujiFilm XT3. Curious if there is a reasonably easy way to attach this camera to my AP filed flattener for use in my 130...I have everything plumbed for Nikon, of course but see nothing for Fuji X-mounts...anyone done similar?
Thanks.
Mike J. Shade: mshade@q.com
Mike J. Shade Photography:
mshadephotography.com
In War: Resolution
In Defeat: Defiance
In Victory: Magnanimity
In Peace: Goodwill
Sir Winston Churchill
Already, in the gathering dusk, a few of the stars are turning on their lights.
Vega, the brightest one, is now dropping towards the west. Can it be half
a year since I watched her April rising in the east? Low in the southwest
Antares blinks a sad farwell to fall...
Leslie Peltier, Starlight Nights
International Dark Sky Association: www.darksky.org <http://www.darksky.org/>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]