I moved this old post from preview.com to here. This is my first post.
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That is right. This is one of the only two beasts: Carl Zeiss Jena Spiegelobjektiv 1000mm f/5.6 (East Germany in the 1960's) and Carl Zeiss Mirotar 1000mm f/5.6 (West Germany in the 1970's). The former AKA CZJ 1000/5.6 has two colors, the light green for military uses (perhaps surveillance) and the black one for photography. This one is about 30.6 lb (or 13.9 kg) and is really big. But, the Mirotar is even larger and heavier.
It is very interesting to note that both 1000mm f/5.6 lenses used the Bouwer design rather than the Maksutov design. Both designs appeared approximately at the same time with Maksutov published his work in a journal, while Bouwer did not.
This lens has a very large base for mounting on tripod, in fact, much larger than the plate on any tripod heads I have, Gimbals included. Furthermore, to ensure focus is correct to some degree, I used a 5" battery powered LCD monitor connected to my Sony A7II. Then, how do I mount it on a tripod? No way, I would not try it. So, I used a Platypad max and a Marsace ball head.
This is the final setup:
Now look at the Marsace ball head, it does not support the heavy lens very well and, as a result, lens vibration may be visible.
I have to find some way to stablize the heavy beast. So, I switched to a Gimbal, actually a Gitzo Gimbal head as shown below. Because the lens tripod mount base is so wide, actually wider than the space the Gitzo can support. One way to resolve this issue is raising the Gimbal mounting plate to its nearly top most position. However, this is still not high enough to clear the Gimbal arm. As a result, I added a thick tripod plate and bingo this is the following. The camera is a Sony A7II and the lens on it is a Russian 300mm f/5.6 mirror lens.
The following is a close up of this combo:
pages.mtu.edu/~shene/CZJ-1000-5.6/LENS-05.jpg
The following from the rear. It really looks a little odd. Isn't it?
pages.mtu.edu/~shene/CZJ-1000-5.6/LENS-06.jpg
If you play with heavy lenses often, you may suspect that raising a lens this high stability is still a problem. Yes, you are perfectly right. However, the situation is much better using a ball head.
* ADDED LATER *
Later I found a fork-mount made by the Move company. In fact, I have a very sturdy mount from my old Celestron C8; but that mount is way to heavy to be moved around. Instead I am in favor of a lighter mount that can by put on my Gitzo tripod. The following images show a rather good result:
CK