Monday, 22 February 2010

Canon FD 85mm f1.2L


I own a Canon F1. It's a professional 35mm camera from the days before digital and autofocus and I'm always on the lookout for more lenses for it. I have a saved search on eBay for Canon FD fit L series lenses and I've noticed something unusual that I would like explained.

L series lenses with the FD fitting are reasonably rare and you can normally expect search results to throw up five or six 'buy it now' and auction items. The lenses sell for £400 to £500 for the mid range lenses, while fisheyes and telephotos are much more expensive. There were well over 100 FD lenses in the range and I would guess that the L series would provide around 15% of the total range but a much lower percentage in terms of units sold due to their very high prices when new. They are immensely collectable today because of their exceptional build quality and optical excellence. Just like the modern autofocus L series in fact.

What surprises me and I think needs an explanation is how a lens like the Canon FD 85mm f1.2L which hasn't shown up on my searches at all before this week can provide six results out of seven for L series lenses in today's search with sellers from the UK, Japan, USA and Ireland. I've noticed recently how a rare lens like this one suddenly becomes available in disproportionately high numbers and then vanishes again. Recent lenses to behave like this are the FD 50mm f1.2L and the FD 24-35mm f3.5L. The sellers are usually from the USA, Ireland or the UK and the buying options vary between low start bid, to high start bid and high priced buy it now.

I'm sure it's not coincidence, though I can't see how it can be anything but. Try it yourself. Just search for "Canon FD L lens" on eBay. When you read this you might find that a different lens is having its day.

I wonder is there a covert production facility knocking out fake new/used L series FD lenses in small quantities in the Far East and distributing them through an international consortium of eBay sellers or is there another explanation. Answers please.



3 comments:

  1. I think you should plot these distributions in a chart and see whether they are statistically significant or just random groupings. I'll be happy to peer review the subsequent paper. My theory is that possibly owners of FD lenses have similar saved searches to see whether what they have is worth anything and whether anyone's buying. Whether it makes sense or no sense to operate within a self-defined mini market you'd have to ask dedicated ebayers.

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  2. The selling price of FD lenses is sinking over time as their owners and collectors either die or decide that film is just too expensive to justify. Therefore the best time to sell will always be now, whereas the best time to buy will always be not quite yet. Why so many owners of the same lens have decided to sell, or die, at the same time is a mystery to me.

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  3. The Canon FD 85mm f1.2L is now providing seven out of the eight results in the eBay search for Canon FD L lenses.

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