Data sheet: Miranda 50 mm f/1.9

Pekka Buttler, 12/2025

Pictured: Auto Miranda 5 cm mm f/1.9

Specifications

The table below summarises the lens’ key specifications (measurements based on pictured sample):

Brand:MirandaLens name1:1.9 f=5cm Auto
Focal length(s)150 mmAngle-of-view247 °
Maximum Aperturef/1.9In Production1963-1968
Lens mount (this lens)MirandaMount subtypeAuto aperture but
no aperture coupling
Length341,5 mmDiameter457,3 mm
Filter ring diameter52 mmWeight193 grams
Lens element count6Lens group count4
Aperture blades (S/R/C)56 SFocus throw290 °
Minimum focusing distance
(indicated)
43 cmsMaximum magnification
(calculated )
1:7
Has manual aperture ringYESHas Manual focus ringYES
Aperture mechanism typeAutomaticAperture click stops 61.9–2.8-4-5.6-8-11-16

Further notes:

• Miranda was – in its heyday – an advanced Japanese camera manufacturer. You can read more about Miranda camera in the JAPB company profile on Miranda camera.
• This lens came as the kit 50 with several generations of Miranda cameras, likely starting with the Miranda F in 1963.
• Unlike previous versions of the Miranda 50/1.9 (manufactured 1958-63) this lens lacks the PAD/pod pass-through device to facilitate aperture stop-down. Instead, this lens’ aperture stop-down is handled by a lever at the base of the mount.
• In 1963 Miranda also launched the Automex series of cameras that supported open-aperture metering when used with lenses that had an arm attached to the aperture ring (that would interlink with a counterpart on the camera mount)
• Importantly, Miranda was a camera manufacturer and not a lens manufacturer. This mean that from early on, Miranda cameras came equipped with various brands of lenses, including some rather prominent manufacturers such as Kowa and Zunow.
• Lenses branded as “Miranda” or “Soligor Miranda” were not manufactured by Miranda, but were sourced from other manufacturers and branded ‘Miranda’. Most often these lenses were sourced from Miranda’s long-time partner (and later: owner) Soligor (Allied Impex Corporation). Hence, the actual manufacturer of “Miranda” lenses is most often impossible to discern with certainty.

Versions/variants

Almost since the beginning of the Miranda camera system, there has been a ‘Miranda’ nifty fifty lens available for the Miranda mount.

YearsAperture automationcolouring schemeMetering supportFilter
mm
MFDNotes
Soligor Miranda 50/1.9 Type I1958–59With PAD/podSilverStop-down only460,45
Soligor Miranda 50/1.9 Type II1959–63With PAD/podBlack (with silver rings)Stop-down only460,43
Soligor Miranda / Miranda auto 50/1.9
for F, G
1963–68lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)Stop-down only460,43[this lens]
Soligor Miranda / Miranda auto 50/1.9
for Automex/ Sensorex
1960–66lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)Open aperture with aperture communication arm460,45
Auto Miranda 50/1.8
for Sensorex
1966-72lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)Open aperture with aperture communication arm460,43
Auto Miranda 50/1.8
for Sensomat
1968-72lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)Stop-down only460,43
Auto Miranda 50/1.8
for Sensorex II
1972–?lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)Open aperture with aperture communication arm460,437
Miranda E Auto 50/1.81972-?lever in mountBlack (with silver rings)lever in mount520,43
Miranda EC Auto 50/1.81974-?lever in mountBlack with silver aperture ringlever in mount490,43

Adapting

This lens cannot be used natively on any current SLR or dSLRs. To use it in its native environment, you will need a Miranda Camera film body. While this lens will mount on any Miranda camera that uses the Miranda mount, its automatic aperture stop-down will work only on Miranda bodies after the Miranda F (launched 1963).

Thanks to being a fully manual lens (manual aperture, manual focus), the lens can be adapted to all mirrorless cameras using a suitable adapter. However, Miranda adapters are not as easily available as adapters for many other legacy era camera mounts, nor is there a wide variety of specialist adapters.

Using Canon FD lenses on dSLRs is a theoretical possibility. Thanks to the relatively short flange focal distance of the Miranda mount (at 41,5 mm, clearly shorter than that of any full-frame dSLR mount), any adapter will necessitate some corrective optics to achieve infinity focus.

Footnotes

  1. Focal length is (unless stated otherwise) given in absolute terms, and not in Full-frame equivalent. For an understanding of whether the lens is wide/tele, see ‘Angle-of-view’. ↩︎
  2. Picture angle is given in degrees and concerns the diagonal picture angle. Rule of thumb:
    > 90 ° ==> Ultra-wide-angle
    70–90 ° ==> Wide-angle
    50–70 ° ==> Moderate wide-angle
    40–50 ° ==> ‘Standard’ or ‘normal’ lens
    20–40 ° ==> Short tele lens
    10-20 ° ==> Tele lens
    5-10 ° ==> Long tele lens
    < 5 ° ==> Ultra-tele lens ↩︎
  3. Length is given from the mount flange to the front of lens at its shortest. ↩︎
  4. Diameter excludes protrusions such as rabbit ears or stop-down levers. ↩︎
  5. S=straight; R=rounded; C=(almost)circular at all apertures. ↩︎
  6. Numbers equal aperture values on aperture ring; • intermediate click; – no intermediate click. ↩︎
  7. The “Auto Miranda 50/1.8 For Sensorex II” is otherwise similar to its predecessor, but is 115 grams lighter than the “Auto Miranda 50/1.8 For Sensorex” (235 grams vs. 350 grams). ↩︎

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