In article <8CCD40A.0007007DC1.uuout@fotobank.nl>, w.j.markerink@fotobank.nl says...
[....]
>BN>BTW, on your web page, you forgot the Nikkors: 19, 35, 65, and 120mm...
>BN>I just tried the Nikkor 35mm f4.5 - very sharp (surprise! ;-)
>BN>They are cute little lenses, if a bit awkward to use...
>BN>Hope This Helps

>As I replied in email to Bob, I never heard of those Nikkors before. I am
>a bit hesitating asking for more information here since even Bob doesn't
>know more about these....;-))
>Does anyone have specifications of those little buggers?
>Are these even still made? (nahh)
>PS 'awkward to use': we are not afraid of using non-AF and non-aperture
>coupled lenses, are we?....;-))

If nothing else, Del's in California listed some or all maybe 10 years
ago in his ads in Shutterbug... (Someone with an old issue out there? ;-)
And, yes, awkward, but I did bravely mount the 35mm f4.5 non-auto (with
"1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6" stop marks) mini lens ("royal" thread mount, adapted
to "T" mount with an adapter from Edmund Scientific, all provided by a
local friend on loan to try...) on about 5" of tubes, stopped it down to
"2 1/2", and hand-held (with TTL flash for exposure) some rather sharp
photos of fly wings, fly heads, and eagle heads (on a US quarter!! ;-)
at about 5X magnification.
Hope This Helps