List Of Minolta A-mount Lenses
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Minolta was a Japanese manufacturer of cameras, camera accessories, photocopiers, fax machines, and laser printers. Minolta Co., Ltd., which is also known simply as Minolta, was founded in Osaka, Japan, in 1928 as . It made the first integrated autofocu ...
and its successor
Konica Minolta is a Japanese multinational corporation, multinational technology company headquartered in Marunouchi, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Chiyoda, Tokyo, with offices in 49 countries worldwide. The company manufactures business and industrial imaging products, in ...
released the following lenses for
Minolta A-mount was a Japanese manufacturer of cameras, camera accessories, photocopiers, fax machines, and laser printers. Minolta Co., Ltd., which is also known simply as Minolta, was founded in Osaka, Japan, in 1928 as . It made the first integrated autofocu ...
cameras between 1985 and 2006.


History

While most auto-focus lens designs were new developments, some optical constructions were derived from
Minolta SR-mount The Minolta SR-mount was the bayonet mounting system used in all 35 mm SLR cameras made by Minolta with interchangeable manual focusing lenses. Several iterations of the mounting were produced over the decades, and as a result, the mount itself wa ...
lenses (as indicated). In the United States, the Maxxum system launched in 1985 with twelve lenses: * 24mm 2.8 * 28mm 2.8 * 50mm 1.4 * 50mm 1.7 * 50mm 2.8 Macro * 135mm 2.8 * 300mm 2.8 APO * 28–85mm 3.5–4.5 * 28–135mm 4–4.5 * 35–70mm 4 * 35–105mm 3.5–4.5 * 70–210mm 4 Initially, the lenses were equipped with narrow ribbed manual focus rings in hard plastic near the front; zoom lenses had a diagonally-ribbed rubber grip. Later lenses changed the grip style and added a rubber coating to the focus ring. Some of the original lenses were re-released with updated cosmetics and are known as "New" or "Restyled" versions; minor optical updates such as coatings and aperture shape were sometimes included. With the introduction of the Maxxum/Alpha 7 and its support for distance-encoded HS(D) flashes in 2001, Minolta began releasing its AF lenses with three additional contacts (eight total) to support the Advance Distance Integration (ADI) functionality, which reports the focus distance back to the camera body. Lenses were branded as "Konica Minolta" starting in August 2003 following the merger of the two companies. When Sony took over the system in 2006, 12 lenses were rebranded as
Sony A-mount , commonly stylized as SONY, is a Japanese multinational conglomerate corporation headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan. As a major technology company, it operates as one of the world's largest manufacturers of consumer and professional ...
lenses and launched alongside 6 new designs and 2 teleconverters. Of the dozen rebranded lenses, most are optically, mechanically and electrically identical to their Minolta predecessors and differ only in their outer appearance, however, three have seen subtle changes in the optics and electro-mechanics. The 20 lenses relaunched in 2006 included: * 16mm 2.8 (legacy) * 20mm 2.8 (legacy) * 28mm 2.8 (legacy) * 35mm 1.4 G (new) * 50mm 1.4 (legacy) * 50mm 2.8 Macro (legacy) * 85mm 1.4 Zeiss (new) * 100mm 2.8 Macro (legacy) * 135mm 1.8 Zeiss (new) * 135mm 2.8 STF (legacy) * 300mm 2.8 G (new) * 500mm 8 Reflex (legacy) * 11–18mm 4.5–5.6 (legacy) * 16–80mm 3.5–4.5 Zeiss (new) * 18–70mm 3.5–5.6 (legacy) * 18–200mm 3.5–6.3 (legacy) * 70–200mm 2.8 G (new) * 75–300mm 4.5–5.6 (legacy) * 1.4× Teleconverter * 2.0× Teleconverter All Minolta and Konica Minolta A-mount lenses are compatible with Sony A-mount cameras.


Regional variations

In North America, Minolta marketed the camera and lenses with the ''
Maxxum The Minolta A-mount camera system was a line of photographic equipment from Minolta introduced in 1985 with the world's first integrated autofocus system in the camera body with interchangeable lenses. The system used a lens mount called A-moun ...
'' branding. Until the mid 1990s, A-mount lenses for the North American market were engraved as ''Maxxum AF''; the rest of the world were branded as ''AF'' lenses, including the regions using the '' Dynax'' and '' α'' branding for the cameras. The initial production runs of ''Maxxum AF'' lenses introduced with the camera system in 1985 originally used a "crossed XX" font, which was soon dropped by Minolta after Exxon brought a trademark lawsuit that year; under the settlement, Minolta agreed to change its logo. Although some buyers associated either the ''Maxxum AF'' or the ''AF'' designation with a higher quality, both types of lenses were built to exactly the same specifications and quality standards in the factory, and were only used to improve trackability and distinguish
gray market A grey market or dark market (sometimes confused with the similar term " parallel market") is the trade of a commodity through distribution channels that are not authorized by the original manufacturer or trade mark proprietor. Grey market pr ...
imports (lenses originally purchased from international sources and resold in North America by private importers rather than official imports from Minolta). They differed only in their cosmetics (name plate engraving) and part number designations (????-1?? for ''AF'', ????-6?? for ''Maxxum AF''). A similar scheme previously had been used by Minolta in the 1960s and 1970s to distinguish their ''
Rokkor Rokkor was a brand name used for all Chiyoda Kōgaku Seikō and later Minolta lenses between 1940 and 1980, including a few, which were marketed and sold by other companies like Leica. The name was derived from the name of Rokkō (六甲山), ...
'' and '' Rokkor-X'' branding variants for SR-mount lenses.


List of

Minolta A-mount was a Japanese manufacturer of cameras, camera accessories, photocopiers, fax machines, and laser printers. Minolta Co., Ltd., which is also known simply as Minolta, was founded in Osaka, Japan, in 1928 as . It made the first integrated autofocu ...
lenses


See also

* List of Konica Minolta A-mount lenses *
List of Minolta A-mount cameras List of products manufactured by electronics company Minolta. Cameras 16 mm film cameras * Minolta 16 series 110 film cameras * Minolta 110 Zoom SLR * Minolta Autopak pocket camera * Minolta Weathermatic A (bright yellow waterproof case) 126 ...
* List of Konica Minolta A-mount cameras * List of Sony A-mount cameras *
List of Minolta V-mount lenses The Minolta Vectis S-series comprises two APS system models of film SLR cameras made by Minolta, the flagship model Vectis S-1 and the Vectis S-100. The cameras feature a compact design, owing to the use of mirrors instead of prisms in the viewfi ...
*
List of Minolta SR-mount lenses A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College, an undergraduate division of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America * SC Germania List, German rugby uni ...

List of Sony A-mount lenses


References

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