Nikon 500mm Mirror lens

Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

By Jeffery Luhn

I bought a used 500mm mirror lens in 1975 when I was shooting for United Press International. It was the longest focal length in the smallest form factor available at the time. Perfect for shooting dangerous situations from behind cover. I should have been using it while photographing the Philippine security forces firing on protesters at an anti-Marcos rally, but I was in the thick of things with a 28mm. That day I got part of my ear shot off from behind. The bullet made my Nikon F disappear into thin air. Fortunately, I was NOT WEARING MY NECK STRAP! After that incident I used the 500mm lens from rooftops, behind garbage cans, trees, and parked cars. It’s a light, easy to handle lens. But being traumatized and bandaged, I was shaking too much to get sharp handheld photos with it on that assignment. I’ll elaborate on that day in another post. Suffice it to say, it’s the only thing I have in common with Donald Trump. Let’s talk about happy shots with the 500mm, which I still have! It works on my Nikon D-610 and D-800. I also use it with an adaptor on my Sony A6000. All the following shots were done on the same day in Santa Cruz, California.

As you can see, the Nikon 500mm Mirror lens is short and stubby. It reminds me of the old 1940 song, “Mr. Five by Five. He’s five feet tall and he’s five feet wide…” I did not attach a sound file of me singing this ditty, so you’ll need to run the title on Google. The lens design is much like a reflector telescope with a small glass viewing lens, called the ocular, that focuses an image formed by a much bigger parabolic mirror. There’s a hole in the parabolic mirror so its resulting image can be concentrated onto a smaller front surface plano mirror and bounced back through the parabolic onto the film plane. Don’t bother analyzing this drawing unless you’re the type of person that enjoys repairing toilets or fixing an Austin 1275cc engine, which in my experience are both equally troublesome.

Thanks to Wikipedia for the use of this drawing for a small donation. There’s no reason to explain how the aperture works, because there isn’t one. WHAT?? You read correctly. This odd lens is wide open at F/8 all the time. This ‘inconvenience’ is worth the trade-off for getting big magnification in a small package. Think about it: F/8 at 1/000th of a second at ISO 400 in bright sun is just right for sports, wildlife, and oogling on nude beaches. This lens has very short depth-of-field, so you must be spot-on with your focus. The digital Nikons make this lens easy to use in aperture priority, with the added bonus of most models displaying a small green ‘focus confidence light’ in the viewfinder. You can assign a beep to it for convenience.

This shot of a seagull plotting to steal a french fry from an innocent and unsuspecting child was taken at about 9 feet. That’s the closest range of the lens. Not very much depth of field here! Note the doughnut bokeh in this shot. Your looking at the result of the hole in the parabolic mirror. Interesting!

My granddaughter playing volleyball on the beach in Santa Cruz, CA. Here we see the comparison of the 500mm lens on the left to an 70-300mm Nikon lens on the right. The image of 70-300 lens had to be increased so Katie remained the same size. Both images were altered in Photoshop to increase contrast. The results are very similar because it was blistering hot that day and heat waves distorted the background. Climate deniers will like the effect, but my feet did not.

This shot of boys riding boogie boards shows the lens at it’s best. The rendition of shadows and highlights is superb. I was lucky on the focus.

This cyclist was about half of the frame and he’s acceptably sharp for being a distant subject. Again, good focus. I lay in wait and prefocused on the ice plant, as runners, walkers, skateboarders, and others made the turn. Like shooting fish in a barrel.

The dougnuts in the background are also obvious here, as is the short DOF. It was late in the day and I was boosting my ISO, hence the grain. Still, very decent shadow detail.

Getting very late by this time. Final shot of the day follows.

Last shot of the day is a spooky photo of a plant with sharp spines. I’d much rather shoot this with my long lens than a macro!

In summary, I think the newer 70-300mm Nikon lens narrowly beats the Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens on sharpness, but not mojo. That mirror bokeh is deliciously special. The fact that these 500mm lenses are available online for about $160 USD is tantalizing. One warning: Mirror lenses are easily knocked out of whack by being dropped, so if you see one for sale with major dings, continue your search.

Jeffery Luhn

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About The Author

By Jeffery Luhn
I started as 'pro' photographer at 17 when I was hired to photograph 'The Hippie Invasion of Europe' by United Press International in 1969. It was a great assignment, from what I remember! Photography and video production has been my career. Teaching photography has been my sideline from 1980, but is now my main job. I love film. I also publish novels on Amazon.
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Comments

Thorsten Wulff on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Thank you Jeffery, I'll go and get one, so that I can leave my 300/2.8 at home ;))
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

It is a fun and unusual lens!

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Bob Janes on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Reflex lenses are very good (if a little lacking in contrast) - until quite recently, Samyang still produced a T-mount 500 f/8.0, but it seems to no longer be listed on their website. Excellent for motorsport.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

I'm not familiar with the Samyang brand. My brother bought an off brand 500mm after playing with mine, and his was rubbish. He sent it back. Considering the low cost of the Nikon, I'd recommend it over new or off-brands unless you've read some good reviews. Another option: Canon made a 500mm catadioptic lens (sp?) for a short time. This is essentially a reflector design, like the mirror lens, except the air space is solid glass!!! Super stable in hot and cold environments, but incredibly heavy!!

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Dave Becker on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Why not stick with the facts and experience of using the lens? Instead you feel obligated to get both your Trump and Climate Change digs in. Typical lib journalism.
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Hamish Gill replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

It’s not journalism, it’s a personal blog, and only a bit of fun.

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Kodachromeguy replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Hmmm, typical Maga complaint?

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James Evidon replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

This is the sort of over sensitive and short tempered behavior we are dealing with in the states these days. I have no doubt Mr. Trump was traumatized and bandaged, so the comparison was a bit of fun and probably an accurate description of Mr. Trump, or at least his ear. People should lighten up but probably won't any time soon. In any case it was a good article. I wonder which is sharper. A 500mm mirror lens or a typical prosumer telephoto of the same focal length.

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Hamish Gill replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

It always seems pretty ironic to me when someone jumps to the defence of trump asking people to "stick to the facts"...

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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Jeffery Luhn here. I'll be more careful about saying anything that could be seen as political. I'm a joker, so I have to be a bit better at filtering my remarks. If my content upset one person, it may have upset more, but they didn't comment. I can be funny and still avoid politics. About the mirror 500m compared to typical prosumer 500mm lenses. I don't see 500mm lenses out there. I see 600mm ones. Not sure why. For the low priced long tele lenses, I'd say the Nikon 500mm is probably sharper, because it's very light and easier to handhold. A LOT EASIER!! But when you go up the food chain to the best manufacturers, like Nikon, Canon, Sigma, Leitz, etc... the 500mm mirror falls short. I was hired to shoot a Womens' PGA national golf tournament a few years ago and I rented a Ninon 200-600mm zoom. The front element was enormous! My gosh, that lens was sharp!!!! It was also about $9,000. But as a rental for $130 for 2 days, it was worth every penny!! My 500mm would have been a mistake on that important job!

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Murray Leshner on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Enjoyable article.

Way back when, singer Jimmy Rushing 'owned' the nickname Mr. Five-by-Five.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Jimmy Rushing was great!

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Dan M on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

I was stationed at MCAS Kaneohe in the late 70's and I worked on a TPS-32 Radar, ~200 yards from Pyramid Rock Beach, (one of the finest beaches on Oah'u). I had a 500mm mirror lens and 2x tele-convertor mounted on my Canon F1 and a tripod, to watch the crowds, (okay, the women). I would set up and shoot thru the picture windows of our office/shop that sat between the two radomes there. My first exposure to Mirror lenses.

I still use a mirror lens periodically w/ my Pentax Q, (equal to ~2800mm), and my Leica CL mirrorless,(~750mm). A very cool lens for the money!
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Hmmm.... naughty you. I too have used a long lens for such activities. A 2x convertor would really be a lot of magnification.

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Gary Smith on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

I stuck a 90mm Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope on a camera once and had a heck of a time getting focus but it sure had good reach!
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Try this: Put your cell phone up to the eyepiece of a telescope or binoculars. Wow, that little lens works so well with that trick!

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James Schilling on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

I have my own 500 mirror and am very pleased to read your article! I also have a D610 and wonder if you would suggest any specific settings to optimize its use with the 500. Thanks so much!!
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

Hi, James. I put my Nikon in Aperture Priority and the camera body chooses the corresponding shutter speed. Usually ISO 400 is adequate in daylight, but I bump up to higher ISO settings if I want to freeze the action.

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Robert Gulley on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 16/09/2024

I bought this same 500mm lens several years ago and really enjoy using it. One of my favorite hummingbird shots was made with this lens, as well as a great moon shot. Maybe I got lucky, but the lens is really sharp, and when filling the frame (or cropping to fill the frame) the background looks very similar to any other lens. With a larger out-of-focus area you will often see the "rings," but for some reason it does not bother me.
Thanks for the article!
Cheers!
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Geoff Chaplin on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 17/09/2024

I've used Maksutov design scopes visually including the Russian 1000mm f8 which was cheap and remarkably good. You've tempted me to find a similar 500mm mirror lens for my digital camera. Excellent write up, thanks.
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 17/09/2024

Geoff, These 500mm Nikon lenses are quite inexpensive and fun to use. They feel nice. Mine has no grit in the focus helicoid so it turns smoothly. The edges of the shots are a bit dark, but that adds to the character. I use it on my Nikon D-610 in aperture priority mode and it works fine. Fun.

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Leonel LeyCar on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 17/09/2024

Hola Jeffrey!
Excelentes fotografías!
Durante muchos años había creído que los lentes "Mirror" no creaban imágenes de buena calidad. Pero veo que tu logras hacer excelentes imágenes.
Gracias por mostrarnoslas. No cabe duda que lo importante no es la herramienta sino como usas la herramienta....
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Daniel Castelli on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 17/09/2024

Hi Jeff,
Your post brings back memories of working in inhuman conditions at a full service camera store back in the early 1970’s. We carried the full Nikon line, and we were encouraged to take gear out for the weekend to become familiar with the goodies. I tried to 500 mirror and the 8mm fisheye. They were expensive and I was terrified to use them because if anything happened to gear we borrowed, we were shut off from access forever. We had a client who was a contract photographer for an aircraft engine manufacturer. He bought the 500, was shooting at an air base and he accidentally dropped the 500. Total destruction. Sounded like a thermos bottle with a broken glass liner.
Nope. Never borrowed any exotic glass again because with my luck it would happen to me.
It was not vey popular with our local nature/wildlife photographers because of the out-of-focus donut shaped rings in the background. Others used the lens to get stunning bird shots
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Jeffery Luhn replied:

Comment posted: 17/09/2024

Yes, The mirror is delicate! I've never dropped mine, but not that you've told what it will sound like, I'll be even more careful. The doughnut highlights are the signature of the lens. Love 'em or hate 'em. I like the portability and the doughnut boket. Thanks for your comments! Jeffery

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Roger on Nikon 500mm Mirror Lens – The short fat cheap deal!

Comment posted: 29/09/2024

Interesting post.and you make me think about getting one of these again, especially when age makes carrying a conventional long telephoto a problem. I once used a Tamron 500/8 (Adaptall 2, so usable on almost any camera) for birds with, unless my memory deceives me, a Canon 300D. I got some shots of a kingfisher with it that I was pleased to get. However, you have to be aware of its limitations. If there is something immediately behind the subject, then the doughnut bokeh can be very distracting if it something that isn’t particularly attractive - in my kingfisher shots it was the mud on a river bank. And holding it steady, especially when a 2x teleconverter was added (real optimism there, even though I recall I was using a monopod) was a problem. But with the stabilization available in modern cameras it might be worth trying one again, not to mention having a long lens to put on a film camera.

My recollection is that I had some other brand before the Tamron that was nowhere near as good, and I sold it pretty quickly. My advice would be that it is worth getting a recognisable brand. Of course, maybe the issue with it was my technique.
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