Jump to content

Aperture ring not working on XF55-200mm


amiliv

Recommended Posts

It seems my XF55-200mm got broken by sitting in a drawer for too long.  After few months of not using it, I put it on the camera, just to discover I can't set aperture by rotating aperture ring anymore.  Camera remembers aperture of the lens I had on it previously (say I had some other lens set to f/8 before putting on 55-200mm), and turning aperture ring on 55-200mm aperture switches between that one and 1/3 stop higher (e.g. only toggles between f/8 and f/9).  I can still use full range of apertures by moving switch on the lens to "auto" (controlled by camera) and using dial on camera body to adjust it.  But not by rotating aperture ring on the lens.

 

Did anybody else experienced anything similar?  I assume the only way to fix is to send it to repairs (it's out of warranty, so I'm still on the fence if it is worth it considering there's workaround).  Hoping somebody had similar problem and found a way to fix it at home.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Yup.  I checked all that.  Contacts look clean on both camera and lens.  I did try resetting camera settings.  The problem appears only with this one lens.  All my other lenses, both variable max aperture (no ring positions, such as 18-55mm f/2.8-4 or new 100-400mm) and fixed max aperture (with aperture ring positions, such as 23mm f/1.4) work just fine.  It's just this single lens giving me trouble.

 

Oddly enough, my brand new 100-400mm just started giving me different kind of trouble after using it for only few days, camera would display "lens control error" if I have OIS enabled.  I wonder if it is just odd coincidence (what are the chances of *two* lenses going bad in span of a week), or something with camera (X-T1 in my case).

 

I'm leaning towards former (troublesome lenses, not troublesome body) since it seems to be two distinct problems and all my other other lenses work perfectly fine.  Aperture ring with 55-200mm (with OIS working OK), and OIS with 100-400mm (with aperture ring working OK).  Not to mention that this same 55-200mm was in repairs for image sharpness problems last November...  I'm kinda becoming bit worried about my (non-trivial) investment in Fuji glass...

Link to post
Share on other sites

Hmm.... There could be something with the 50-200 lens, something deeper than just a sharpness issue, could a slightly loose cable, I would send it back again for inspection.

 

As for the 100-400 lens, we have some users reporting lens quality issues that could have passed QC.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I support darknj idea to send 55-200mm back to service, it sounds like electronic issue. But first try to find other Fuji body to confirm that issue there reproduces.

 

I've checked details on aperture control design from this nice article of Lensrentals

https://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2016/02/the-long-awaited-scary-and-amazing-fuji-lens-teardown/

 

You can see that there are 2 optical sensors that scan positions of rectangles inside of aperture ring.

If it works for single sub-step switch - something may be wrong with sensors, maybe some dirt particle fall on one.

https://www.lensrentals.com/blog/media/2016/02/aperture-control.jpg

Link to post
Share on other sites

Well, looks like both lenses will travel cross country to repairs center tomorrow.  The two sensor design for aperture ring is classic and proven design (e.g. old mechanical mouses detected direction of movement in the same way).  If it only wasn't susceptible to dust...  However, I'm surely not going to venture into opening the lens myself and trying to clean stuff inside.  I'd estimate it at one in a million chance lens would survive me opening it ;-)

 

Thanks all!

Link to post
Share on other sites

  • 6 years later...
On 4/19/2016 at 12:00 AM, amiliv said:

Yup.  I checked all that.  Contacts look clean on both camera and lens.  I did try resetting camera settings.  The problem appears only with this one lens.  All my other lenses, both variable max aperture (no ring positions, such as 18-55mm f/2.8-4 or new 100-400mm) and fixed max aperture (with aperture ring positions, such as 23mm f/1.4) work just fine.  It's just this single lens giving me trouble.

 

Oddly enough, my brand new 100-400mm just started giving me different kind of trouble after using it for only few days, camera would display "lens control error" if I have OIS enabled.  I wonder if it is just odd coincidence (what are the chances of *two* lenses going bad in span of a week), or something with camera (X-T1 in my case).

 

I'm leaning towards former (troublesome lenses, not troublesome body) since it seems to be two distinct problems and all my other other lenses work perfectly fine.  Aperture ring with 55-200mm (with OIS working OK), and OIS with 100-400mm (with aperture ring working OK).  Not to mention that this same 55-200mm was in repairs for image sharpness problems last November...  I'm kinda becoming bit worried about my (non-trivial) investment in Fuji glass...

Hi there, i have this issue also please halp me what the problem with your lens can you tell to me i wanna try to fix but i did’n understaind how the aparture ring worked becouse i see the elektronic contact really wierd, i see flex cable with 2 plastic pin i don’t know how that worked

Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Similar Content

  • Posts

    • It is really easy to find out if the wifi is on. Your computer or tablet or cell phone will have a network settings dealing with wifi, bluetooth, ethernet or “other”. Open that up and go into the section for wifi, and take note of which networks are listed. Turn on the camera and keep watching the list of networks. If your camera’s wifi is turned on, a new network should suddenly show up in your computer/tablet/phone’s network listings. Now go into the camera’s menus and start a wireless connection (the x-app or camera remote app can help you with this). You should see a network show up now. It is not hidden because it has to be visible so that your computer/tablet/phone can join the camera’s network to transfer images. Turn the camera off and that network should disappear. Turn the camera back on and see what happens.
    • Sweet Creek Falls, Oregon. X-H1, Viltrox 13mm F1.4, Acros.

      Welcome, dear visitor! As registered member you'd see an image here…

      Simply register for free here – We are always happy to welcome new members!

    • I think my Fuji 150-600 F8 is a brilliant wildlife lens in terms of sharpness, portability and value but the small aperture does cause issues at the start and end of the day - even pushing the ISO as far as I dare, I can see shutter speed down to 1/25s - stabilisation isn't an issue but asking a deer to stand still for that is too much! In the same situation, an F4 would give 1/100s so the difference to the success rate would be phenomenal... and that's without the other improvements like shallower depth of field. I also find that the Fuji's subject detect AF gets pretty iffy in low light - I keep updating to the latest firmware but it doesn't seem to get any better. I was originally looking at the Nikon 500mm F4 E but good examples secondhand are still reasonably expensive but like-for-like Sigma lenses are around half the price. Reviews I have read suggest that they are as good optically, AF performance and IS-wise but you gain a few hundred grams of weight (but less than the older Nikon model). For a couple of grand, I can live with that. Does anyone have any experience mounting one on an XH2S? What about with the 1.4 teleconverter? It feels like that is pushing it anyway - hefty lens + TC + Fringer all sounds a bit...wobbly? It is on the Fringer approved list but I am wary about AF speed in particular. I had also considered looking for a used Nikon 400mm F2.8, which would be even faster (and heavier) and could couple with a TC to give 560mm F4 but again, it is that lens+TC+Fringer combination that worries me as being just too many links in the chain. Of course, what I really want is a native Fuji prime but that doesn't seem to be on the horizon - and if you look at what Nikon and Sony are doing, if Fuji do ever bring out a 500mm prime, it will probably be a small, light and cheapish F5.6, which is only 2/3 stop better than my zoom at the same focal length. Any thoughts anyone?
    • The Amazon link is an annoying feature of this forum - its automatic and is applied to every post for advertising purposes. My question was - how do you know the camera wi-fi is on and requires turning off? I would have thought this would just use up the battery for no purpose if you aren't specifically using a function that requires wi-fi.
    • I've made a point to push Angelbird memory products as they are the best performance cards you can get, The sustained write speed is important.
×
×
  • Create New...