Super Takumar Serial Number Year

Super Takumar Serial Number Year 4,9/5 6610 votes

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I have a Fa 77 Limited that I brought new about 5 years ago. The serial number is under a thousand. The first four digits of the seven digits serial number are zeros.

M42 Takumars serial numbers began at 100000 (Japan) to 130000 (export) and duplicates are very rare. All standard 1:2/55 mm Super-Takumar and SMC models (viz. Lenses for 6x7 Takumar and 67 Pentax cameras for many years. By far the most prolific producer of radioactive lenses was Eastman Kodak. For example for the Nikkor 35mm f/1.4 lens and the Super Takumar 50mm f/1.4 lens. Tested lenses Edit Lenses Tested Radioactive. Up to serial number 8552600) Carl Zeiss Jena Biometar 80mm f2.8 'Zebra' '(Only P6 mount version ).

Going by the serial number would you say that this was a very early copy of the Fa 77 Limited? The box it came in and the lenses sure looked brand new. Also this is a silver copy if that makes a different. I have been curious about this for a while and if this is a early copy it makes you wonder how long it was sitting on a shelf before being sold to me or maybe it was a case of Pentax using up old parts. Well yes, probably, but not a simple one.

Different manufacturers will have different ways of doing things serial number wise, especially if the building of the same lens is out-sourced to different factories. I have no idea if that (contracting out manufacture) applies to modern Pentax. My experience in this is with tracking down the provenance of classic Vivitar Series 1 lenses, for which most of the numbering is based on identifying which of the various sub-contracting companies actually built the lens; and as that went from one sub-contractor to the next there is probably some sort of time-line.

The final few digits may give some sort of clue as to the number in the run, but I wouldn't count on it. Batch number, maybe. This is the first time I've thought about this, but getting drawn in, it seems to be absurd to think that as every lens clunks off the production line, the serial number etched into/onto it goes up by 1? Surely no way? Gerry Winterbourne wrote: There seems to be no logic to the serial numbers. Here are some of mine: DA* 200/2.8 - 9031976 DFA 100/2.8 macro - 9340193 DA 70/2.4 - 0002300 FA 50/1.4 - 5886226 DA 35/2.8 Macro - 9275597 The FA 50 is relatively old, both in design and when I bought it.

The three starting with 9 are probably in the order I bought them but the DA70 comes from somewhere in the middle. I’m beginning to think that there is no real meaning to the serial numbers as there is no way that more Da 35mm Macro lenses were made than the Fa. John Michael Winterbourne wrote: This is the first time I've thought about this, but getting drawn in, it seems to be absurd to think that as every lens clunks off the production line, the serial number etched into/onto it goes up by 1? Surely no way?

That would have been the initial definition of a serial number, I think--a number that was assigned to the thing in serial order. For many products, this is exactly what was and is done; but it is of course not the only method. For the limited lenses, I think this may be what Pentax does. The other forum website has a serial number database, which makes for interesting perusal if you're a nerd like me and into that sort of thing. Otherwise, it's likely almost as exciting as reading through the phone book. I didn't think of that - and no, I have never personally seen any reference to that (duplicate numbers, and by implication multiplied several/many times over). I've just looked very closely at a Super-Takumar 1:1.4/50, 1827055, and all of the letters/numbers are white paint in slightly recessed receptors, for want of a better word.