Electronics > Microcontrollers

DIY Control of Electronic Aperture for a Digital Lens [SOLVED]

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jpanhalt:
I got my first camera in 25 years due to my older Canon taking a fall from its tripod.  I went with a new the Nikon Z30 and saw a decent used Quantaray 200 to 55mm telephoto/macro lens that has a Nikon F mount for $10 on eBay.  Now, I know why.  There is no manual way to control the aperture.  A brief search did not return anything helpful for DIY digital control or the protocol.

There are 5 electrical contacts at the lens base arranged as a group of 4 +1.  Has anyone sorted out the protocol for that control?  I would simply set the aperture to something useful and control focus and ISO manually.

Failing that, will the electronic FTZ (Nikon F to Z with electrical contacts) work with it?  It does fit a non-electronic FTZ adapter.

Regards, John

EDIT:  just found this:

--- Quote ---The basic Nikon F interface is 5 pins, Vcc (regulated power), RW1 (tach), SCK (serial clock), SIO (serial data), gap, gap, LGND (ground).
--- End quote ---
I2C?  My Nikon Z has more pins than that. 
Apparently, drive is a screw/motor drive. 

shtirka:

--- Quote from: jpanhalt on March 16, 2023, 06:49:24 pm ---I got my first camera in 25 years due to my older Canon taking a fall from its tripod.  I went with a new the Nikon Z30 and saw a decent used Quantaray 200 to 55mm telephoto/macro lens that has a Nikon F mount for $10 on eBay.  Now, I know why.  There is no manual way to control the aperture.  A brief search did not return anything helpful for DIY digital control or the protocol.

There are 5 electrical contacts at the lens base arranged as a group of 4 +1.  Has anyone sorted out the protocol for that control?  I would simply set the aperture to something useful and control focus and ISO manually.

Failing that, will the electronic FTZ (Nikon F to Z with electrical contacts) work with it?  It does fit a non-electronic FTZ adapter.

Regards, John

EDIT:  just found this:

--- Quote ---The basic Nikon F interface is 5 pins, Vcc (regulated power), RW1 (tach), SCK (serial clock), SIO (serial data), gap, gap, LGND (ground).
--- End quote ---
I2C?  My Nikon Z has more pins than that. 
Apparently, drive is a screw/motor drive.

--- End quote ---
Well to me that sounds like (at least from what you are initially describing) an SPI setup - though I doubt it would help much since there doesnt seem to be any sort of cheat sheet on what sort of instructions/commands are available for the actual lens control

Ilya

jpanhalt:
Thank you for the reply.  I assumed the RW1(tach) was not read/write or CS/SS, but rather a real tachometer feedback from the focus and aperture motors.  That left only 2 wires.  The source was a photography site, so I don't put much reliance in the labels.  However, it could be most anything, even a special camera interface.

jpanhalt:
It took more than a few minutes, but I found it:

https://nikonhacker.com/wiki/Lens_Serial_Interface

Google search:
https://www.google.com/search?q=https%3A%2F%2Fnikonhacker.com%2Fwiki
%2FLens_Serial_Interface&source=hp&ei=4_EUZIHcJqO90PEPnuSCkAk&iflsig=AK50M_UAAAAAZBT_82_cUflJC
VCdpET2qGqVkff8JEss&ved=0ahUKEwjB2b6_ieT9AhWjHjQIHR6yAJIQ4dUDCAs&uact=5&oq=https%3A%2F
%2Fnikonhacker.com%2Fwiki
%2FLens_Serial_Interface&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EANQAFgAYP0FaABwAHgAgAFwiAFwkgEDMC4xmAEAoAECo
AEB&sclient=gws-wiz

Here are some other (of several) interesting links:
https://hackaday.com/2013/04/24/hacking-a-sigma-lens-to-work-with-a-canon-camera/
https://stanford.edu/class/ee367/Winter2017/burkle_danyliw_girvin_ee367_win17_report.pdf

EDIT: It's a modified SPI without SS.  The "tach" must be the handshake and functions R/W (A0)

cantata.tech:
Great work.

I'm going to try this on my Nikon1 J5 and see if it works. I have a collection of vintage lenses.

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