A point of clarification on swirls (Since I can't edit the video). I'm aware that people have tested the swirls of different Helios 44 series from 44 to 44M-7, and found under controlled conditions that they swirl in the same way. If I could edit this video, I'd say that I've conducted my own head-to-head tests in a controlled situation and found similar conclusions. The Helios designers worked to improve coatings and reduce aberrations, but possibly did not try to eradicate swirls, over the series types. However, I still find that under less controlled, real world walk-around conditions that my early Helios 44 and 44-2s seem (for some reason) to swirl more, it's just my experience. Similarly, in most real-world conditions where I'd expect a Helios 44-2 to swirl, I'd say my early CZJ Biotar 58/2 doesn't swirl. But in a few exceptional situations, the Biotar will swirl quite a lot. I think these "real world conditions" make a difference. Personally, I find it harder to get swirls from the 44M lenses onwards. Again, this is just my experience, and understand if people disagree
I feel they swirl more or less the same, flare, corner sharpness, contrast can be different. I wonder if variations are model to model. I compared 44-2,3, M, M-4 and I do not really see significant differences. 44-3 and 44M-4 seem to have more contrast wide open. But these variations could not be due to condition, inside dust, cleaning marks, coating differences? I find the M series easier to focus and adjust aperture. with 44-2/44-3 it is easy to knock the fous while changing the aperture, especially with gloves. I have to decide what to keep, what to sell. 44M-4 seems the cleaners, 44M-3 smoothest ring but I get some flare lines (maybe some dust inside?), 44-2 has a stiff focus helicoid, 44-3 may be good for filming due to clickless aperture ring (the preset). I ordered a 44M-6. Probably I will just keep 3. While the 44-2 looks cool, the M series are more practical to use.
I enjoyed your video and I agreed with most of it. I own quite a few of these lenses, including the 40, and the original 13 blade 44, as well as a 40-2 and 44m-4. My only disagreement is that I find my 44m-4 has lovely swirls to it, and is one of my favorite lenses. I would use it more, but the focus ring is so stiff that I have a problem with it unscrewing the lens from my adapter. It was so inexpensive, I purchased a second copy in the hopes of smoother focus, but it was equally stiff, perhaps due to caked lubrication.
I use 44-2 lenses quite a bit and have done for years. Across years of manufacturing and across different factories of production they certainly do not swirl in any similar manner. Nor do they visually behave in similar fashion in terms of bokeh, infinity reach, image quality, close focus reach and depth of field across apertures. Use them of different cameras and they behave differently again. And that's just 44-2 lenses. I can only think folks who find not only 44-2 lenses, but many others from the Helios 58mm range, similar is simply because they are using a narrow range on the same camera while suing the same software settings to produce digital images.
the m39 mount 13 blades version is my favourite as well. unfortunately mine doesn't swirl a lot, but it delivers great sharpness and colors. it's my go-to portraits lens
Another really interesting and informative review of this particular series of lenses. Wonderful sample images too by the way Simon. Thank you for taking the time to do this.
I have both the 44 and 44m4 and I love them both. The 44 is one of my favorites. Wide open the bokeh looks like a surrealist painting while leaving my subject beautifully separated and decently sharp in the center. The perfect budget friendly art lens 👌 My 44m4 is also a really nice lens, and I still am able to get some swirly bokeh in the right conditions, but it's dinette a much better all around fast 50 lens. Nice Sharon's and colors
Was a cheap lens until recently. Around $130-$200 for the 44-2 and a little less for 44M. Crazy jump in price considering it’s a pretty common lens. This and the vintage canon FD set are my favorite lenses ever
Hello Simon´s utak! I´ve been keen on your RUclips pages for few days now, first saw one of your videos and Photos you kindly share to all, and the lens history behind every single image are a fest, Thank you for share such a passion for image and lenses. The luxury of such images and description on your own experiences makes your channel and videos very precious for me, Hurra!!
Came across your great videos after finding out that I had a Carl Zeiss Ultron 50mm/1.8 lens which was in my collection for 30 years and I never used it, until I started recently investigating the camera body and the lens. I then bought an adapter to use it on my Nikon Z7II, as I wanted to use the old vintage lenses I had in my day to day photography and I knew about the nice results (bokeh) you can get from them. I then started looking into where I can buy these old lenses and what information there is about them and must say, your videos are not only very informative, but also objective which helps a lot and as you say, not everything you read on the internet about the lens turns out to be true. I definitely am going to continue looking for more of these lenses and on my list are the Helios 44-2 and the Ashai Super Takumar 55mm 1.8. Hope to see more of yourr good videos especially where you perhaps can show more how to clean and reverse lens components as you did on the Helios - if possible. Many thanks
I have the 44-3 version that doesn't fit on the adapter correctly. I sanded the back of the lens mount using an orbital sander and now it fits very well. Thanks for the comparison video, it was helpful! Edit: The back of the focus ring is what I sanded down, not the mount.
excellent- I have a number of these lenses and now I have a better idea of what to expect from each variation, I had been taking test shots with each to find my favorite for each condition you have saved me a lot of time
I purchased my first 44-2 based on your recommendation and I am extremely happy with the photographic results. Waiting to use it for video...thanks for your information.
@Lucía Santos Eslava hi there. i'm not a film maker so I cannot really advise. I think the 44m4 has better image quality, but both lenses would need to have the aperture rings "de-clicked" if you were filming (i guess?)
Retro foto house recently did a side-by-side of the 44-2 with the 44M-4, taking the same photos with both. The bokeh/swirl was identical, although there will always be sample variation. I trust his testing since he's handled thousands of these lenses. The physical construction of the 44M-4 is better and it's slightly sharper, and it's multi-coated. The main drawback is the 6-blade aperture vs. 8. The 44M-5 is the same lens as the 44M-4, with the same sharpness, but just received a new number when production moved to The Valdaj factory. The -6 and -7 were the same as the -5, except they tested the resolution as they came off the line and gave the -6 and -7 badges to the sharper copies. So they're effectively just "good" copies of the 44M-4. There are fake 44M-7 floating around. Some are re-badged 44M, which are obvious to tell because the 44M has an auto/manual aperture switch and the 44M-4,5,6,7 do not. Others are rebadged 44M-5 or 6. Since they are physically identical, and the history and release dates are very fuzzy, there's basically no way to identify them unless the badge is very poorly faked. I have a 44M-7, and it swirls just fine given the right conditions. I don't see a significant difference in that respect from the two 44-2 I own. It's entirely possible it's a fake, but it would be a rebadged 4/5/6, which are the same design.
Many thanks for providing these details on the 44m-4 to 44M-7. The most blatant fake 44M-7s I've seen, as you mention, are those with the 44M a/m switch! I've been trying out a 44M-7 recently (hopefully a genuine one) to see how it compares with the 44M-4. (I'm happy to stick with the 44M-4). On the swirls, yes, I've seen a couple of side by side tests, and they both found the bokeh/swirl is near identical. Quite frankly, I didn't believe these results, it doesn't match my real world experience, nor the experience of others I've read on-line. So I did my own controlled tests, and guess what? The swirls, or more specifically the arrangement of the oval bokeh-balls around the edges, were near identical! However, I still believe, maybe more in delusion, that when I take my earlier, lesser coated and more-bladed Helios lenses out in non-controlled conditions, less favorable conditions, I'm more likely get swirls from the the earlier lenses than the 44M lenses onwards. I've had a similar experience with the early 'parent' Carl Zeiss Biotar T 58/2. My own view is that this lens swirls less than the early Helios 44s. However, in just the right controlled lighting conditions I can get it to swirl a lot...the problem is that this is really an exception not the rule, driven by very favorable conditions and in many other situations it doesn't appear to swirl like a Helios.
@@Simonsutak Fussing too much about the 4/5/6/7 is probably not worth it; as you mentioned, if your main concern is sharpness there are plenty of other better and faster fast-fifties. That's really not the point of this lens.
@@Simonsutak I find differences are more in flare and contrast wide open. Swirls seem very comparable from 44-2, 44-3 MC, 44M, 44M-4 MC. I tried also the Oreston 50, which seems cooler, still with smooth bokeh. At the end the only way to find out is to take the same photo with both lenses, best if on different bodies of the same FF mirrorless camera. Maybe the difference in flare makes you frame and compose in different ways with different Helios lenses. That and the contrast seem the most visible difference. Thank you for your video overviews. At the end you will get the Helios feel with any Helios. number of blades and position of focus ring. handling are important factors. too.
I bought a Zenit B with Helios 44 F2/58mm lens in a shop in Putney, way back in 1970. It's been well used, but also well looked after and still gives brilliant pictures. The colour saturation and contrast are very good and sharpness is maintained across the whole picture, except at the corners, when on F2. Manufacturer is MMZ. I have the Zebra version. Thanks for the information about Bokeh. I never understood the phenomena of the swirling background, not that I ever had much of it in my photos, due to the type of pictures I took.
1 year later the Helios 44-2 jumped to 70 to 90 EU :| I was glad to pick up a 44M for a "mere" 45EU. Don't have the adapter in yet, but I'm hoping to at least get some swirling out of it. Wish I had found this video before I went hunting but oh well. Crazy how the pricing has changed.
Very helpful! I have both the 44-2 and the 44M so that is good to know. I find the blade smoothness buttery on the 44-2, similar to the Helios 33 which is 35mm f2 and I use both in video and film production as they both fit the K3 as well. The 44M while larger and takes 55mm filters has a courser blade construction I find and while 8 blades, nowhere nearly as smooth as the 44-2. I keep them both. One main advantage of the 44-2 is the stopless aperture for video and film, a Godsend compared to the clicks you experience on the 44-M.
The swirls are really such a tiny part of this lens, but they take center stage every time. The lens only swirls under certain conditions; typically around max aperture. The rest of the time the lens has beautiful smooth bokeh. When you stop down to f/4 the poor corner sharpness of f/2 and f/2.8 dramatically improves and it's sharp corner to corner. As for sample variation. My opinion is there was less sample variation from the factories than rumored. Most of the issues are from the type of life the lens has had. As for the Soviets making copies. It is my understanding after the German's lost the war the optical formula's were part of the reparations. Surprisingly I actually prefer the single coated version. I prefer the colors it produces and it gives more flexibility in post processing.
Yes, like you, I prefer single or lesser coating lenses. Some of my early lesser coated lenses have a magical combination of sharpness and very dreamy blur, as well as beautiful light/flare effects.
I’ve got a 44m-4 and it does swirl. I guess that’s relative. It might not swirl as much as the older ones, but it does swirl more than anything else I have. I’ll try to find an older version and make a comparison. Mine is also pretty soft wide open, in particular the corners, but also the Center a little bit. The bokeh has a 3d effect and it screams for attention. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad. It might easily attract more attention than the subject, if the subject isn’t something special.
What an amazing lens. It really should cost much more than it does. I've been shooting a bunch with my Sirui anamorphic lenses, but this video reminded me that I have a CLA'd anamorfaked 44-2 in my drawer that needs to be used lol Excellent work here. #Subscribed
I have M42 KMZ Helios 44M 58mm F2 (8 blades) and M42 Valdai Helios 44M-4 58mm F2 (6 blades). Both barely used looking like new. Since my 44M-4 was created for later cameras with aperture lever operating the lens, I had to put a bit of plastic tube on the aperture pin to block it into depressed position and be able to stop it down. Both are surprisingly sharp at F2 on APS-C center and have less cromatic aberations than some classic premium brand 50/1.4 lenses. F4-5.6 easily saturates 24Mpix AA-less APS-C sensor with fine detail. If only I had much more free time to play with all the lenses... :D
Thank you very much for this comparison This was just what I was looking for. Looks like my decision to get the 44-2 lens, mainly for its unique character, was the right way to go.
I've got a Zebra 44-2. I didn't like it at first. But I eventually wrapped my head around it. It is great for more stylized nature photography. Though I do find that like older Takumars you have to be careful about hard highlights in the foreground. It has some ugly flare and coma. Another thing I found out is that if you are on a crop sensor, get a speed booster. It's not that it isn't fast enough. But rather you need to get the whole frame onto your smaller sensor to appreciate the swirly character.
I just bought one and it doesn’t fit on my 44-2 adapter to sony that I have for my other Helios lens. Do you know where I can find the zebra 44-2 adapter ?
Simon, thank you for the work you put in. You're quite the vintage lens specialist, so I'd like to ask: could you list which of the ones you've had the pleasure with over the years, has a 52mm front filter thread? I'm asking because I'd love to try a few in front of the Aivascope for cinematic purposes. Cheers!
Nice review. I think your voice sounds just fine. Maybe a bit fast but we live in fast times. This is a subject a lot of people obsess about. They should just get a 44-2. My copy focusses much smoother than my 44m and much much smoother than my 44-m6.
Nice one! I had the 44-2 (my 1st Helios) - 5 quid, then came 44 - 10 quid, and this evening I got the 44M-4 + a Zenit SLX (like brand new - hard to understand how that's possible) - 15 quid (I know). :) Thx for clarifying the differences, great video. [SUB]
I now own a Helios M44 and have just begun using it. One small appreciation is that it’s made in the USSR. Growing up in the 70s in the US the USSR was seen as the enemy. We believed they couldn’t be trusted because they might start a war against us. That may or may not have been true but the reality is there were good people in the USSR making lenses. They were likely hard workers making a quality product. Likely going home to their family, trying their best. Here we are decades later and one of those lenses is in my home halfway around the world from where it started. It’s a reminder that in general, we are all on this tiny blue planet, trying our best and if we give it some time we can maybe wake up and realize we could be appreciating one another now.
Actually, not. The quality in USSR was horrible, and all designs were stolen from the "outer world" countries. Regarding the Helios series, they produced them until late 90th with the same poor glass from 50th.
I just got the 44-3 version and I think I've come across one of the types that doesn't bother with adapters. The 44-3 version is the model that best balances the sharpness, bokeh and contrast trilogy in my opinion. I would like to say this for those who are considering buying a 44-3 and are afraid of adapters. The copy I got is from the belomo factory as in the video and has a number like 91.....
i had to subscribe.. i have been shooting for a while but clearly missed a few memos in creative style. i just picked up a lens lot from Russia with 4 versions of this lens including a few rolls of Smena 64 film and 3 other lenses.. i find this video helpful as my lenses are currently in customs in Belarus.
You are fantastic. I which I saw your video before buying, but now I have subscribed. Have a digital camera, but would like to restore my old f65, first camera I had. Can I use Helios lenses on it?
Many thanks! These Helios lenses have a M42 screwmount mount. So you'll need an adapter that fits the lens on the f65. Fortunately, adapters for M42 mounts and other camera mounts are quite common. The only exception in my collection is the early chrome Helios 44. and that has a M39 mount. A few lens/camera adapter combinations don't give a focus all the way to infinity, and I'm afraid I don't know whether that is the case with you camera. Have fun!
I recently acquired a 44-3 from Russia and am surprised it is significantly sharper and has better contrast than my KMZ factory made 44M-4. I’m now a 44-3 “believer” 👍
Hi Jon - A question you may be able to answer as you own one. I bought this very model as I liked the heavy build and the fact the greater number of blades would ensure smootlhy formed bokeh circles even at small apertures. My only disappointment was that the markings end up 90 degrees from conventional position when using an M42 to EOS adapter, thus making setting hyperfocal distance a bit awkward - i.e., all the markings for aperture, distance, d-o-f are at the 9 o'clock position! All my other Helios 44's line up just fine. Likewise the Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar 58/2 on which the Helios models were based. Seller maintains this is because the original 44 had 39mm threads and adapting these to M42 causes that misaligned appearance. Just curious if this has been your experience when mounting to your Minolta. Many thanks!
My Zenit 44M-4 is very soft below f/4. From f/4 upwards it does get very sharp. For this reason I haven't used the lens in a long time. Instead I use Pentax-F 50 1.7 which is super sharp wide open.
Excelente masterclass! Qué adaptadores se recomiendan para usar los Helios en Nikon Z full frame? Tengo un 44M. He visto un Fotasy M42-NZ. Y un K&F Concept.
Damn, i bought 44M thinking is 44-2, the swirl is good enough for me though, definitely visible, more than that might actually be too much. I also saw 44-4 and that is way more smoother to use but i didn't bought because had fewer blades (although i'm shooting wide open all the time), now i'm glad i didn't because you say has even less swirl.
Sometimes. That's my experience - it's not as swirly as the Helios lenses overall, but sometimes, in the right conditions, yes it can swirl. Here's an example: www.flickr.com/photos/95859572@N06/48652054491/in/album-72157649510390487/
great video man. I wonder if you have any info about other russian lenses: Zenit MC zoom lenses. Some of the later Zenits cameras came with this zoom as a kit lens. 35-70mm and 28-70mm. recently bough one and am doubting of its quality as i couldnt find any info on them. thank you, keep the good work!
I have a Helios 44-2 which has the same body design actually with the Helios 44-3, and I find it weird since the 44-3 has a redesigned body as you mentioned.
I've tested my own 44-2 lenses and none of them appear to be radioactive. I think it's just a rumour...however, I also have other lenses that are not supposed to be radioactive, but are, so you can never tell 100%.
Hey I saw this video and you had just uploaded it recently/started your new channel. I think my biggest piece of feedback would be to increase the resolution of your videos. I can only see this at 480p at most (old tube TV resolutions) and it's nearly impossible to tell the difference or see what your pictures (which are really nice) actually look like since the videos resolution is so low. If you can work or reupload this at 1080p it would be a major help :)
Thank you so much for this, it's really helpful advice. Do you know whether I can simply re-upload this video...or do I need to re-direct people from a link on this screen?
@@Simonsutak you'll have to go back into your video editing software and export the video so it has a higher resolution, and then reupload it to youtube. Itll be a separate video with an entirely separate link. You could delete this or unlist it, or just direct people to the new link in the description of this one. Your videos are pretty good for a newer channel and reminds me a bit of the channel Zenography. You should check him out if you're looking for guidelines on how to model your stuff :)
@@Simonsutak another good resource for russian lenses and history of them is RetroFotoHouse. He repairs sells modifies and maintains old Soviet and German lenses, so he knows a lot and I've learned a bunch from him.
@@GeronimoJak Yes, he's excellent. I stripped down and repaired a very rusty/blades stuck together Yashica Yashinon 5cm f2 after watching his videos - it gave me the courage to do it.
HI ! Thanks for the great video! I really enjoyed it! I have a quick question do you know which of these have a click-less aperture? You mentioned the 44 does not but do any of the others & which would you recommend for video ? Thanks again!
Hello, glad you like the video. I hope I didn't mislead you! The 44, 44-2 and 44-3 all have click-less apertures. They all have a preset mechanism, with two rings - you set the limits to the aperture movement with one ring, and then the other aperture ring is click-less across all stops up to the limit set by the first ring. So they'd all be good for video. From the Helios 44M onwards, all the lenses have a single clicked mechanism. The 44-2 is probably the best value for money.
Simon's utak Thank you so much for your help! I understood from your video, that the 44 does not have the “clicking” due to an additional mechanism that will create a pre-defined aperture range (which influences a second aperture ring that does not click). Sorry for my previous phrasing. I ‘m sure it sounded unclear. Thank you again! It means the world!
Thanks, great review. Saved me buying a 44m-4... I have a 44-2 which I find has really ugly flare. One of the reasons I wanted the lens was for flare, but on this copy at least it's all striated and strangely grainy looking. Haven't heard this mentioned anywhere and wondering if I should try a different copy.
I just bought a 1973( special edition glossy black..white lettering) belomo helios 44-2 still sealed in a box with its original case and paperwork. Never used or even attached to a camera. 150$. So many treasures out there in the Russian vintage lens world. These lens can actually do really nice bnw Street photography and just scream with character. I find modern clinically sharp lenses almost boring.
Standard lens on the m42 Zenit camera's. Not the early m39 Zenit's, they had a Industar lens. Not all the versions can be reversed the front lens, because the thead is to short. You can find a lot of info on Retro Foto House in youtube. Its a lensmaker and knows everything about it.
I have a 58mm f2 Auto Cosmogon serial number 011911. It has a bayonet mount. I can't try it because it doesn't fit any of my bayonet fitting cameras. It appears to have 8 blades and is heavily purple coated. I have an old 44-2 pre set which I love.
i wish i would have seen this earlier. I just bought a mint condition 44M-4 for wedding videos, for a unique look. I'll wait a couple of days until the adapter arrives for my Sony A73 to see how it does. It looks like i may have to sell this and get the 44-2?
probably the difference is negligible. Probably due to sample variation. If 44M-4 MC it will have better flare control and contrast wide open than the 44-2.
Hey Simon. How are you doing? Since I am a big fan of your channel, and your opinion means a lot to me, I was wondering if I could send you some of my photos. I'd love to hear your thoughts on them.
5:37 They are supposed to have oily blades. (Except the auto version, about which you talk later, but both the completly manual as the preset one must have oil on the blades.)
Hello! As far as I know the lensnumbers up to -7 depend on the resolution they had when they were tested in the factory. -7 should be the best resolution. I´ve seen it a couple of times in the i-net, but i`m sorry I don´t remember where. greets Götz
Interesting - I didn't even realize these lenses were a thing until RUclips's algorithm brought up this and other videos. Looking on ebay, there are a large number of 44-2s and 44-Ms on sale, a lot of them are under USD30, and are shipping from Ukraine (shipping's only USD15). Now to see what I can find in terms of M42 to Pentax K adapters. And I wonder if those M39 mount lenses from my FED2 and FED5 are of any use... FED2 is useless for taking photos (there's some sort of problem with the viewfinder/rangefinder - can't see anything through it), maybe I can use the lens. Come to think of it, I can't remember where I put the thing...
I don't know I'm afraid. My silver 44 comes from KMZ and that is my only experience. I do, however, also own at least three Helios lenses from MMZ - a 44, 44-2 and 44-3 and I'm happy with all three.
A point of clarification on swirls (Since I can't edit the video).
I'm aware that people have tested the swirls of different Helios 44 series from 44 to 44M-7, and found under controlled conditions that they swirl in the same way.
If I could edit this video, I'd say that I've conducted my own head-to-head tests in a controlled situation and found similar conclusions. The Helios designers worked to improve coatings and reduce aberrations, but possibly did not try to eradicate swirls, over the series types. However, I still find that under less controlled, real world walk-around conditions that my early Helios 44 and 44-2s seem (for some reason) to swirl more, it's just my experience.
Similarly, in most real-world conditions where I'd expect a Helios 44-2 to swirl, I'd say my early CZJ Biotar 58/2 doesn't swirl. But in a few exceptional situations, the Biotar will swirl quite a lot. I think these "real world conditions" make a difference. Personally, I find it harder to get swirls from the 44M lenses onwards. Again, this is just my experience, and understand if people disagree
I feel they swirl more or less the same, flare, corner sharpness, contrast can be different. I wonder if variations are model to model. I compared 44-2,3, M, M-4 and I do not really see significant differences. 44-3 and 44M-4 seem to have more contrast wide open. But these variations could not be due to condition, inside dust, cleaning marks, coating differences? I find the M series easier to focus and adjust aperture. with 44-2/44-3 it is easy to knock the fous while changing the aperture, especially with gloves. I have to decide what to keep, what to sell. 44M-4 seems the cleaners, 44M-3 smoothest ring but I get some flare lines (maybe some dust inside?), 44-2 has a stiff focus helicoid, 44-3 may be good for filming due to clickless aperture ring (the preset). I ordered a 44M-6. Probably I will just keep 3. While the 44-2 looks cool, the M series are more practical to use.
@@stefpix Hey I have a chance to buy a 44 M6. So Id like to ask how do you like yours ?🤔
thank you sir, sick collection
I enjoyed your video and I agreed with most of it. I own quite a few of these lenses, including the 40, and the original 13 blade 44, as well as a 40-2 and 44m-4. My only disagreement is that I find my 44m-4 has lovely swirls to it, and is one of my favorite lenses. I would use it more, but the focus ring is so stiff that I have a problem with it unscrewing the lens from my adapter. It was so inexpensive, I purchased a second copy in the hopes of smoother focus, but it was equally stiff, perhaps due to caked lubrication.
I use 44-2 lenses quite a bit and have done for years. Across years of manufacturing and across different factories of production they certainly do not swirl in any similar manner. Nor do they visually behave in similar fashion in terms of bokeh, infinity reach, image quality, close focus reach and depth of field across apertures. Use them of different cameras and they behave differently again. And that's just 44-2 lenses. I can only think folks who find not only 44-2 lenses, but many others from the Helios 58mm range, similar is simply because they are using a narrow range on the same camera while suing the same software settings to produce digital images.
I have first version, the 44-13 blades.I absolutely love this lens, it's very good for portraits.
Me too. :)
What’s model name? Year of release?
the m39 mount 13 blades version is my favourite as well. unfortunately mine doesn't swirl a lot, but it delivers great sharpness and colors. it's my go-to portraits lens
Another really interesting and informative review of this particular series of lenses. Wonderful sample images too by the way Simon. Thank you for taking the time to do this.
I have both the 44 and 44m4 and I love them both. The 44 is one of my favorites. Wide open the bokeh looks like a surrealist painting while leaving my subject beautifully separated and decently sharp in the center. The perfect budget friendly art lens 👌
My 44m4 is also a really nice lens, and I still am able to get some swirly bokeh in the right conditions, but it's dinette a much better all around fast 50 lens. Nice Sharon's and colors
Thank you for the time to make this video. Incredibly helpful in navigating the Helios market.
Was a cheap lens until recently. Around $130-$200 for the 44-2 and a little less for 44M. Crazy jump in price considering it’s a pretty common lens. This and the vintage canon FD set are my favorite lenses ever
I paid so much for canon Fd this year I hate it
Really? I still see offers for 30-70€
@@nk__ it’s usually the worst manufactured one but it’s maybe a little cheaper in Europe 🤷🏻♂️
Hello Simon´s utak!
I´ve been keen on your RUclips pages for few days now, first saw one of your videos and Photos you kindly share to all, and the lens history behind every single image are a fest, Thank you for share such a passion for image and lenses. The luxury of such images and description on your own experiences makes your channel and videos very precious for me, Hurra!!
Came across your great videos after finding out that I had a Carl Zeiss Ultron 50mm/1.8 lens which was in my collection for 30 years and I never used it, until I started recently investigating the camera body and the lens. I then bought an adapter to use it on my Nikon Z7II, as I wanted to use the old vintage lenses I had in my day to day photography and I knew about the nice results (bokeh) you can get from them. I then started looking into where I can buy these old lenses and what information there is about them and must say, your videos are not only very informative, but also objective which helps a lot and as you say, not everything you read on the internet about the lens turns out to be true. I definitely am going to continue looking for more of these lenses and on my list are the Helios 44-2 and the Ashai Super Takumar 55mm 1.8. Hope to see more of yourr good videos especially where you perhaps can show more how to clean and reverse lens components as you did on the Helios - if possible. Many thanks
I have the 44-3 version that doesn't fit on the adapter correctly. I sanded the back of the lens mount using an orbital sander and now it fits very well. Thanks for the comparison video, it was helpful! Edit: The back of the focus ring is what I sanded down, not the mount.
Not for the faint hearted - glad it works!
A perfect review! Short, to-the-point and informative, with just enough personality to keep me interested.
excellent- I have a number of these lenses and now I have a better idea of what to expect from each variation, I had been taking test shots with each to find my favorite for each condition you have saved me a lot of time
Many thanks. If you can, please let me know your conclusions - I'd be interested in what you think.
Just got a 44-3 and am feeling happy with it😌
I purchased my first 44-2 based on your recommendation and I am extremely happy with the photographic results. Waiting to use it for video...thanks for your information.
Thanks for this - great little mini overview of these. I have a 44-2 and 44m-4 (which i've just stripped, cleaned and re-greased.) Both lovely.
@Lucía Santos Eslava hi there. i'm not a film maker so I cannot really advise. I think the 44m4 has better image quality, but both lenses would need to have the aperture rings "de-clicked" if you were filming (i guess?)
this is what I was looking for! excellent review
Retro foto house recently did a side-by-side of the 44-2 with the 44M-4, taking the same photos with both. The bokeh/swirl was identical, although there will always be sample variation. I trust his testing since he's handled thousands of these lenses. The physical construction of the 44M-4 is better and it's slightly sharper, and it's multi-coated. The main drawback is the 6-blade aperture vs. 8.
The 44M-5 is the same lens as the 44M-4, with the same sharpness, but just received a new number when production moved to The Valdaj factory. The -6 and -7 were the same as the -5, except they tested the resolution as they came off the line and gave the -6 and -7 badges to the sharper copies. So they're effectively just "good" copies of the 44M-4.
There are fake 44M-7 floating around. Some are re-badged 44M, which are obvious to tell because the 44M has an auto/manual aperture switch and the 44M-4,5,6,7 do not. Others are rebadged 44M-5 or 6. Since they are physically identical, and the history and release dates are very fuzzy, there's basically no way to identify them unless the badge is very poorly faked.
I have a 44M-7, and it swirls just fine given the right conditions. I don't see a significant difference in that respect from the two 44-2 I own. It's entirely possible it's a fake, but it would be a rebadged 4/5/6, which are the same design.
Many thanks for providing these details on the 44m-4 to 44M-7. The most blatant fake 44M-7s I've seen, as you mention, are those with the 44M a/m switch! I've been trying out a 44M-7 recently (hopefully a genuine one) to see how it compares with the 44M-4. (I'm happy to stick with the 44M-4).
On the swirls, yes, I've seen a couple of side by side tests, and they both found the bokeh/swirl is near identical. Quite frankly, I didn't believe these results, it doesn't match my real world experience, nor the experience of others I've read on-line. So I did my own controlled tests, and guess what? The swirls, or more specifically the arrangement of the oval bokeh-balls around the edges, were near identical!
However, I still believe, maybe more in delusion, that when I take my earlier, lesser coated and more-bladed Helios lenses out in non-controlled conditions, less favorable conditions, I'm more likely get swirls from the the earlier lenses than the 44M lenses onwards. I've had a similar experience with the early 'parent' Carl Zeiss Biotar T 58/2. My own view is that this lens swirls less than the early Helios 44s. However, in just the right controlled lighting conditions I can get it to swirl a lot...the problem is that this is really an exception not the rule, driven by very favorable conditions and in many other situations it doesn't appear to swirl like a Helios.
@@Simonsutak Fussing too much about the 4/5/6/7 is probably not worth it; as you mentioned, if your main concern is sharpness there are plenty of other better and faster fast-fifties. That's really not the point of this lens.
@@Simonsutak I find differences are more in flare and contrast wide open. Swirls seem very comparable from 44-2, 44-3 MC, 44M, 44M-4 MC. I tried also the Oreston 50, which seems cooler, still with smooth bokeh. At the end the only way to find out is to take the same photo with both lenses, best if on different bodies of the same FF mirrorless camera. Maybe the difference in flare makes you frame and compose in different ways with different Helios lenses. That and the contrast seem the most visible difference. Thank you for your video overviews. At the end you will get the Helios feel with any Helios. number of blades and position of focus ring. handling are important factors. too.
I bought a Zenit B with Helios 44 F2/58mm lens in a shop in Putney, way back in 1970. It's been well used, but also well looked after and still gives brilliant pictures. The colour saturation and contrast are very good and sharpness is maintained across the whole picture, except at the corners, when on F2. Manufacturer is MMZ. I have the Zebra version. Thanks for the information about Bokeh. I never understood the phenomena of the swirling background, not that I ever had much of it in my photos, due to the type of pictures I took.
1 year later the Helios 44-2 jumped to 70 to 90 EU :| I was glad to pick up a 44M for a "mere" 45EU. Don't have the adapter in yet, but I'm hoping to at least get some swirling out of it. Wish I had found this video before I went hunting but oh well. Crazy how the pricing has changed.
Very helpful! I have both the 44-2 and the 44M so that is good to know. I find the blade smoothness buttery on the 44-2, similar to the Helios 33 which is 35mm f2 and I use both in video and film production as they both fit the K3 as well. The 44M while larger and takes 55mm filters has a courser blade construction I find and while 8 blades, nowhere nearly as smooth as the 44-2. I keep them both. One main advantage of the 44-2 is the stopless aperture for video and film, a Godsend compared to the clicks you experience on the 44-M.
Yes, the click-less aperture is so useful for video.
I bought 44-M thinking is 44-2, is it much difference in the swirl? I'm pretty happy with 44M but now i can't wonder if i'd like the other better.
The swirls are really such a tiny part of this lens, but they take center stage every time. The lens only swirls under certain conditions; typically around max aperture. The rest of the time the lens has beautiful smooth bokeh. When you stop down to f/4 the poor corner sharpness of f/2 and f/2.8 dramatically improves and it's sharp corner to corner. As for sample variation. My opinion is there was less sample variation from the factories than rumored. Most of the issues are from the type of life the lens has had. As for the Soviets making copies. It is my understanding after the German's lost the war the optical formula's were part of the reparations. Surprisingly I actually prefer the single coated version. I prefer the colors it produces and it gives more flexibility in post processing.
Yes, like you, I prefer single or lesser coating lenses. Some of my early lesser coated lenses have a magical combination of sharpness and very dreamy blur, as well as beautiful light/flare effects.
Great insight on the subtle differences of the different versions of Helios lenses.
Ihave the 44m from my grandpa ..and now I'm verry happy with it after watching this vid !
A terrific summary of the Helios 44's well done.
Thank you! Much appreciated.
I’ve got a 44m-4 and it does swirl. I guess that’s relative. It might not swirl as much as the older ones, but it does swirl more than anything else I have. I’ll try to find an older version and make a comparison.
Mine is also pretty soft wide open, in particular the corners, but also the Center a little bit. The bokeh has a 3d effect and it screams for attention. I’m not sure if that’s good or bad. It might easily attract more attention than the subject, if the subject isn’t something special.
What an amazing lens. It really should cost much more than it does.
I've been shooting a bunch with my Sirui anamorphic lenses, but this video reminded me that I have a CLA'd anamorfaked 44-2 in my drawer that needs to be used lol
Excellent work here.
#Subscribed
thank you so much for this valuable review, I loved how beautifully you describe the lenses and their performances
Thank you for your kind words, much appreciated.
Great review and tips, I recently moved to Moscow and about to try and buy my first Helios, now I know what to buy. Thanks
Thank you for your kind words. Happy hunting!
@@Simonsutak thanks Simon, wanna ask u, some Helios has letters MS (МС), is it better quality indication or something?!
@@Ali.lensman Hi, MC stands for Multi-Coated (glass), and this means the glass should have better flare control and better contrast.
@@Simonsutak Thanks again simon, you absolutely right, МС (многослойного) means multilayered, I just checked it now 😁
I have had and tested too the full series of helios 44. I share your analysis - the only variation is that I have a few 44M4 copies that are 8 bladed
I'm really enjoying my 44-4 and it seems to be glued on my XT-4 at the moment. It's surprising good at video.
Are you using a focal reducer?
I wonder how it took me so long to find this great piece of information about Helios 44
I have M42 KMZ Helios 44M 58mm F2 (8 blades) and M42 Valdai Helios 44M-4 58mm F2 (6 blades). Both barely used looking like new. Since my 44M-4 was created for later cameras with aperture lever operating the lens, I had to put a bit of plastic tube on the aperture pin to block it into depressed position and be able to stop it down. Both are surprisingly sharp at F2 on APS-C center and have less cromatic aberations than some classic premium brand 50/1.4 lenses. F4-5.6 easily saturates 24Mpix AA-less APS-C sensor with fine detail. If only I had much more free time to play with all the lenses... :D
1.58 looks like Bracklesham, my local beach! Great video
Great spot!! It's the beach at West Wittering, looking towards Bracklesham.
thank you for actually going in depth, much appreciated.
I have KMZ 44-3. Great lens and best of 44-3 (KMZ produced most even ones). I was also thinking about silver 44 with 8 blades. May Maybe one day :)
Thank you very much for this comparison
This was just what I was looking for.
Looks like my decision to get the 44-2 lens, mainly for its unique character, was the right way to go.
I've got a Zebra 44-2. I didn't like it at first. But I eventually wrapped my head around it.
It is great for more stylized nature photography. Though I do find that like older Takumars you have to be careful about hard highlights in the foreground. It has some ugly flare and coma.
Another thing I found out is that if you are on a crop sensor, get a speed booster. It's not that it isn't fast enough. But rather you need to get the whole frame onto your smaller sensor to appreciate the swirly character.
I just bought one and it doesn’t fit on my 44-2 adapter to sony that I have for my other Helios lens. Do you know where I can find the zebra 44-2 adapter ?
Simon, thank you for the work you put in. You're quite the vintage lens specialist, so I'd like to ask: could you list which of the ones you've had the pleasure with over the years, has a 52mm front filter thread? I'm asking because I'd love to try a few in front of the Aivascope for cinematic purposes. Cheers!
Nice review. I think your voice sounds just fine. Maybe a bit fast but we live in fast times. This is a subject a lot of people obsess about. They should just get a 44-2. My copy focusses much smoother than my 44m and much much smoother than my 44-m6.
Many thanks!
Simon's utak I liked your speed. Normally I watch videos at 1.25x or 1.5x speed, but this was just right for me
I have a 44-M-4 2/58, and it's got plenty of swirl wide open at F2 with a pretty small focus area at the centre of the frame.
Yup, same here.
Nice one! I had the 44-2 (my 1st Helios) - 5 quid, then came 44 - 10 quid, and this evening I got the 44M-4 + a Zenit SLX (like brand new - hard to understand how that's possible) - 15 quid (I know). :) Thx for clarifying the differences, great video. [SUB]
I now own a Helios M44 and have just begun using it.
One small appreciation is that it’s made in the USSR.
Growing up in the 70s in the US the USSR was seen as the enemy. We believed they couldn’t be trusted because they might start a war against us.
That may or may not have been true but the reality is there were good people in the USSR making lenses.
They were likely hard workers making a quality product.
Likely going home to their family, trying their best.
Here we are decades later and one of those lenses is in my home halfway around the world from where it started.
It’s a reminder that in general, we are all on this tiny blue planet, trying our best and if we give it some time we can maybe wake up and realize we could be appreciating one another now.
Actually, not. The quality in USSR was horrible, and all designs were stolen from the "outer world" countries. Regarding the Helios series, they produced them until late 90th with the same poor glass from 50th.
@@NikitaGarets Sure, but the point he made about good people trying their best in the USSR was not wrong. You'll find those everywhere.
Great video, I own the 44M-4 and love it really nice lens. What camera were you using btw?
I just got the 44-3 version and I think I've come across one of the types that doesn't bother with adapters. The 44-3 version is the model that best balances the sharpness, bokeh and contrast trilogy in my opinion. I would like to say this for those who are considering buying a 44-3 and are afraid of adapters. The copy I got is from the belomo factory as in the video and has a number like 91.....
Nice review. Well done. I've got a Helios 44 black zebra with a m39 mount. It was delivered on a Zenit 3M which has also a m39 mount.
Well done and informative review of the family and great photography! Might I suggest a link over to your flickr? Just a thought.
Yes, that's a good idea - I'll put links to my Flickr albums in the description.
I've got exactly what I came for, precise title, video to the point, gladly liking the video and subscribing!
Good video 👍🏽 BTW, Helios 44m 7 is sharpest then others before. 😎
Thank you!! I've got a 44M-7, and I'm planning to compare it with the Zenitar M 50/1.7, to see how sharp they are.
@@Simonsutak I would like to know your results, qsince I also have a Zenitar-M and wonder about the 44M-7 (and 77M-4 too) 🤔
@@Simonsutak Let me know if Zenitar does not satisfy and you wish to get rid of it :)
Great video. What did you mean at 2:41 when you said you "reversed the front element" for that shot? I loved how it came out.
Thank you! Have a quick look here - where I explain how I reversed the front element (glass). ruclips.net/video/QMSoPK-ok8Q/видео.html
i had to subscribe.. i have been shooting for a while but clearly missed a few memos in creative style. i just picked up a lens lot from Russia with 4 versions of this lens including a few rolls of Smena 64 film and 3 other lenses.. i find this video helpful as my lenses are currently in customs in Belarus.
You are fantastic. I which I saw your video before buying, but now I have subscribed. Have a digital camera, but would like to restore my old f65, first camera I had. Can I use Helios lenses on it?
Many thanks! These Helios lenses have a M42 screwmount mount. So you'll need an adapter that fits the lens on the f65. Fortunately, adapters for M42 mounts and other camera mounts are quite common. The only exception in my collection is the early chrome Helios 44. and that has a M39 mount. A few lens/camera adapter combinations don't give a focus all the way to infinity, and I'm afraid I don't know whether that is the case with you camera. Have fun!
I recently acquired a 44-3 from Russia and am surprised it is significantly sharper and has better contrast than my KMZ factory made 44M-4. I’m now a 44-3 “believer” 👍
Yes, it is a really good lens, thanks for your comment.
I have the chrome one with 13 blades. Love it. I have it adapted to my minolta srt 101. Chunky metal beast.
Hi Jon - A question you may be able to answer as you own one. I bought this very model as I liked the heavy build and the fact the greater number of blades would ensure smootlhy formed bokeh circles even at small apertures. My only disappointment was that the markings end up 90 degrees from conventional position when using an M42 to EOS adapter, thus making setting hyperfocal distance a bit awkward - i.e., all the markings for aperture, distance, d-o-f are at the 9 o'clock position! All my other Helios 44's line up just fine. Likewise the Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar 58/2 on which the Helios models were based. Seller maintains this is because the original 44 had 39mm threads and adapting these to M42 causes that misaligned appearance. Just curious if this has been your experience when mounting to your Minolta. Many thanks!
Thank you for a informative review. I purchased a custom 44-3 zebra with 16 blades it has better and more unique
bokeh than a 50mm1.2L.
Thank you. Sounds like a great lens! I'm constantly surprised how good these lenses are - how centre sharp they are, and how good the bokeh is.
My Zenit 44M-4 is very soft below f/4. From f/4 upwards it does get very sharp. For this reason I haven't used the lens in a long time. Instead I use Pentax-F 50 1.7 which is super sharp wide open.
Yes, the F 50mm f1.7 is at a different level, and it has AF.
Excelente masterclass! Qué adaptadores se recomiendan para usar los Helios en Nikon Z full frame? Tengo un 44M. He visto un Fotasy M42-NZ. Y un K&F Concept.
TY Simon for your review, I'm certainly buying one. But why in 480 resolution? It's 2020 (2021 now) and photography channel?
Damn, i bought 44M thinking is 44-2, the swirl is good enough for me though, definitely visible, more than that might actually be too much. I also saw 44-4 and that is way more smoother to use but i didn't bought because had fewer blades (although i'm shooting wide open all the time), now i'm glad i didn't because you say has even less swirl.
Nice video, thanks. :)
What about the Biotar 58 mm? Does it have the typical Bokeh?
Sometimes. That's my experience - it's not as swirly as the Helios lenses overall, but sometimes, in the right conditions, yes it can swirl. Here's an example: www.flickr.com/photos/95859572@N06/48652054491/in/album-72157649510390487/
Great information, many thanks. 👍
Really great review, thank you very much! ❤
Amazing review, full of infos but what if the money doesn't matter what's the best lens to get ?
If money doesn’t matter, I’d recommend the earliest (lowest serial number) silver Helios 44, M39 13 blades version you can find!
An interesting review. Absolutely keep it up!
Thank you!
great video man. I wonder if you have any info about other russian lenses: Zenit MC zoom lenses. Some of the later Zenits cameras came with this zoom as a kit lens. 35-70mm and 28-70mm. recently bough one and am doubting of its quality as i couldnt find any info on them. thank you, keep the good work!
Thank you! I'm sorry, I've never used these zooms - and I've never seen anyone I know on-line use them either. I'd be interested to see the results.
I have a Helios 44-2 which has the same body design actually with the Helios 44-3, and I find it weird since the 44-3 has a redesigned body as you mentioned.
There are so many variations!! Part of the fun of collecting Helios 44 lenses.
That is the transitional body 😊
Thank you for this in-depth review. Any thoughts about the 44-2 as a possibly radioactive lens? (or are these just unfounded rumors/claims)
I've tested my own 44-2 lenses and none of them appear to be radioactive. I think it's just a rumour...however, I also have other lenses that are not supposed to be radioactive, but are, so you can never tell 100%.
Great video, do you have some suggest to obtain a swirly bokeh on a medium format? Thanks!
Great Video! Could you please share your perspective on the “Zebra” versions? Anything to watch out for other the play on the screw mount?
Thank you. Very good review.
Hey I saw this video and you had just uploaded it recently/started your new channel. I think my biggest piece of feedback would be to increase the resolution of your videos. I can only see this at 480p at most (old tube TV resolutions) and it's nearly impossible to tell the difference or see what your pictures (which are really nice) actually look like since the videos resolution is so low. If you can work or reupload this at 1080p it would be a major help :)
Thank you so much for this, it's really helpful advice. Do you know whether I can simply re-upload this video...or do I need to re-direct people from a link on this screen?
@@Simonsutak you'll have to go back into your video editing software and export the video so it has a higher resolution, and then reupload it to youtube. Itll be a separate video with an entirely separate link. You could delete this or unlist it, or just direct people to the new link in the description of this one.
Your videos are pretty good for a newer channel and reminds me a bit of the channel Zenography. You should check him out if you're looking for guidelines on how to model your stuff :)
@@Simonsutak another good resource for russian lenses and history of them is RetroFotoHouse. He repairs sells modifies and maintains old Soviet and German lenses, so he knows a lot and I've learned a bunch from him.
@@GeronimoJak Yes, he's excellent. I stripped down and repaired a very rusty/blades stuck together Yashica Yashinon 5cm f2 after watching his videos - it gave me the courage to do it.
@@GeronimoJak Many thanks for your encouragement. I'll take a closer look at Zenography.
HI ! Thanks for the great video! I really enjoyed it! I have a quick question do you know which of these have a click-less aperture? You mentioned the 44 does not but do any of the others & which would you recommend for video ? Thanks again!
Hello, glad you like the video. I hope I didn't mislead you! The 44, 44-2 and 44-3 all have click-less apertures. They all have a preset mechanism, with two rings - you set the limits to the aperture movement with one ring, and then the other aperture ring is click-less across all stops up to the limit set by the first ring. So they'd all be good for video. From the Helios 44M onwards, all the lenses have a single clicked mechanism. The 44-2 is probably the best value for money.
Simon's utak Thank you so much for your help!
I understood from your video, that the 44 does not have the “clicking” due to an additional mechanism that will create a pre-defined aperture range (which influences a second aperture ring that does not click). Sorry for my previous phrasing. I ‘m sure it sounded unclear.
Thank you again! It means the world!
Thanks, great review. Saved me buying a 44m-4... I have a 44-2 which I find has really ugly flare. One of the reasons I wanted the lens was for flare, but on this copy at least it's all striated and strangely grainy looking. Haven't heard this mentioned anywhere and wondering if I should try a different copy.
44M-4 MC and 44-3 MC are qute better at controlling flare.
@@stefpix Thank you Stefano, I'll have to think about giving one of those a shot!
thx for the review. what exactly is the Petzval mod? worth considering?
Thank you for your time, that was most useful
You're welcome!
It is a nice review. Now you introduce a whole new level of LBA for me!
LOL...many thanks for commenting
I just bought a 1973( special edition glossy black..white lettering) belomo helios 44-2 still sealed in a box with its original case and paperwork. Never used or even attached to a camera. 150$. So many treasures out there in the Russian vintage lens world. These lens can actually do really nice bnw Street photography and just scream with character. I find modern clinically sharp lenses almost boring.
Thanks for this ton of info!
Standard lens on the m42 Zenit camera's. Not the early m39 Zenit's, they had a Industar lens. Not all the versions can be reversed the front lens, because the thead is to short. You can find a lot of info on Retro Foto House in youtube. Its a lensmaker and knows everything about it.
I have a 58mm f2 Auto Cosmogon serial number 011911. It has a bayonet mount.
I can't try it because it doesn't fit any of my bayonet fitting cameras. It appears to have 8 blades and is heavily purple coated.
I have an old 44-2 pre set which I love.
Hello. Thank you so much for video, very helpful for me. :)
i wish i would have seen this earlier. I just bought a mint condition 44M-4 for wedding videos, for a unique look. I'll wait a couple of days until the adapter arrives for my Sony A73 to see how it does. It looks like i may have to sell this and get the 44-2?
probably the difference is negligible. Probably due to sample variation. If 44M-4 MC it will have better flare control and contrast wide open than the 44-2.
Thank you for clarifying all of the different truly appreciated will be looking for the 44-2… great channel
I bought helios 44 13 blades for $55, fuji adapter included, can't wait it arrived
That sounds like a good deal!
Hi I have Fuji xt3 and I need one where I can get?
I have a 1971 Helios 44-2 58mm f2 and it is great.
I found my helios-44 on my family storage, it's being services at the moment, i hope it can be revived
You can find a lot of info of Old Soviet lenses on ' Retro foto house' on RUclips. I think it's a lensmaker.
Hey Simon. How are you doing?
Since I am a big fan of your channel, and your opinion means a lot to me, I was wondering if I could send you some of my photos. I'd love to hear your thoughts on them.
5:37 They are supposed to have oily blades. (Except the auto version, about which you talk later, but both the completly manual as the preset one must have oil on the blades.)
Interesting I have the 44M-4 and it does have noticeable bokeh swirling
THANK YOU!
Excelent Video!
Hello!
As far as I know the lensnumbers up to -7 depend on the resolution they had when they were tested in the factory. -7 should be the best resolution. I´ve seen it a couple of times in the i-net, but i`m sorry I don´t remember where.
greets
Götz
I keep seeing the helios 44-2 "Art Photo Group" is this a good one?
Interesting - I didn't even realize these lenses were a thing until RUclips's algorithm brought up this and other videos. Looking on ebay, there are a large number of 44-2s and 44-Ms on sale, a lot of them are under USD30, and are shipping from Ukraine (shipping's only USD15). Now to see what I can find in terms of M42 to Pentax K adapters. And I wonder if those M39 mount lenses from my FED2 and FED5 are of any use... FED2 is useless for taking photos (there's some sort of problem with the viewfinder/rangefinder - can't see anything through it), maybe I can use the lens. Come to think of it, I can't remember where I put the thing...
Did you really work in St.P? I live there now :)
I hear that the KMZ silver is top quality. And Valdai is the lower end.
What are your thoughts about the Helios silver 58/2 MMZ?
I don't know I'm afraid. My silver 44 comes from KMZ and that is my only experience. I do, however, also own at least three Helios lenses from MMZ - a 44, 44-2 and 44-3 and I'm happy with all three.
will a M39>M42 >EF adapter chain work? always read the m39 cannot fit on ef / has issues with the clearance to the mirror/sensor
Make a review on Zenitar-M 50/1.7, please
I will...
I bought a Helios 44 Zebra on Ebay, but when it arrived 4 months later, it was a 44-2.
Oh no! So sorry to hear this. Hope you could get a refund...but 4 months is a long wait. Postage from Russia is very, very slow at the moment it seems
@@Simonsutak I'm not even going to attempt to get a refund.
i like the worts version vintage look.
I got mir 18 and 44m-4 for free, all good condition, now just need to use them.