Data Sheet: Helios-81H (50mm f/2)

Pekka Buttler, 02/2024

Pictured: HELIOS-81H 50mm f/2 lens (as with many Soviet lenses, the name ring combines Cyrillic (H) and Latin characters (MC Helios))

Specifications

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

Brand:HeliosLens name81H MC
Focal length(s) 150 mmAngle-of-view 245 °
Maximum Aperturef/2In Production1965-1997
Lens mountNikon FOther available
lens mounts
M42,
Kiev Automat
Length 330,7 mmDiameter 462,3 mm
Filter ring diameter52 mmWeight213 grams
Lens element count6Lens group count4
Aperture blades (S/R/C) 56 SFocus throw270 °
Minimum focusing distance50 cmsMaximum magnification1:7,9
Has manual aperture ringYESHas Manual focus ringYES
Aperture mechanism typeAutomaticAperture click stops 62•2.8•4•5.6•8•11-16

Further technical notes:

• The lens’ angle-of-view is reported as 45 °, which would be a bit wider than that of typical 50 mm lenses (on full-frame). However, as somewhat typical for Soviet standard lenses, the lens’ focal length is sometimes reported as 50 m and sometimes (more rarely) reported as 53 mm. As I do not have the apparatus to verify the field of view, I will have to base my information on sources that are traditionally valid.
• Having a length that is less than half of its diameter, this lens technically qualifies as a pancake lens.
• The four versions of this lens are:
• Helios-81 AUTOMAT (Kiev Automat mount)
• Helios-81H (Nikon F mount – H is N in cyrillic)
• Helios-81M (M42 mount)
• Arsat-H 50 mm f/2 (Ukranian/post-Soviet version of the 81H)

Historical notes on the Helios-81N

• The earliest samples of the Helios-81 design were intended to be used as standard lenses on the Kiev Automat system (Kiev 10 and Kiev 15 cameras). Read more of that system here.
• Subsequently, the lens was somewhat redesigned (more compact housing) and offered as a entry-level standard lens on the Kiev 17/19 SLR system that used a Nikon F mount (more info on that episode here). All Nikon mount versions of the Helios-81 are Ai-compatible.
• Both these lenses were manufactured at the Arsenal plant in Kiev. There’s also a rarer model (Helios-81M) manufactured by KMZ for the M42 mount.
• The name ‘Helios’ is not a brand, nor a manufacturing organisation. Instead, the name Helios was originally used in the Soviet union to denote various Carl Zeiss Jena Biotar remakes, but was later repurposed simply as a catch-all name for double-Gauss typed fast standard lenses. The Soviet logic was different, and in very many ways. Read more here.
• The Helios-81 for the Kiev Automat was manufactured starting in 1965; while the Nikon F mount version went into production in the late 70s. All samples of the M42 mount version I have seen hail from the early 1980s.
• After the Fall of the Soviet Union, the Nikon F mount version of this lens remained in production under the name “Arsat-H 50 mm f/2”. The last copies I have encountered were manufactured in 1997.

A brief genealogy of Nikon SLR lens types

The type of the Nikon F lens mount used by this lens is of the ‘Ai’ (automatic indexing) subtype. A more detailed account is available here, but the development of Nikon’s SLR lenses can be briefly traced as follows:

• 1959–1977: Pre-Ai. Manual focus lenses that use ‘rabbit ears’ to communicate selected aperture with the camera body.
• 1977–1986: Ai and Ai-s. Manual focus lenses that may have ‘rabbit ears’ for backward compatibility, but are designed to communicate selected aperture with the camera body through indentations in base of aperture control ring.
• 1986–today: AF and AF-D. Autofocus lenses that do not have a focusing motor within the lens, but rely on the focus motor within the camera. All AF and AF-D lenses are simultaneously Ai-s lenses (they are Ai-s lenses extended with AF) 7
• 1996–today AF-S and AF-P. Autofocus lenses that have an internal focusing motor and do not rely on the body having a focusing motor.

Adapting

Besides adapting, this lens can be used natively on all current high-end Nikon dSLRs and several earlier medium-to-high-end older Nikon dSLRs8. Likewise, if it still has its rabbit ears, it can be natively used on all Nikon F-mount film cameras ever produced (without the rabbit ears, it is limited to post 1977 bodies).

Thanks to being a fully manual lens (manual aperture, manual focus), the lens can be adapted to all mirrorless cameras using a suitable dumb adapter (and such adapters are easy to find). Moreover, a large range of special adapters (helicoid adapters, tilt/shift adapters, speed boosters) for using Nikon F lenses on most mirrorless systems are available.

Using Nikon F lenses on non-Nikon SLRs and dSLRs is likewise a distinct possibility. Thanks to the relatively generous flange focal distance of the Nikon F mount (46,5 mm), adapter rings for all dSLR mounts are available as well as for a goodly portion of film-era SLR mounts. Such rings may not allow for auto aperture, but even then the lenses can be used in stop-down metering mode.

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 infinity. ↩︎
  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. There is a further sub-class of AF-D lenses called AF-I lenses that are otherwise AF-D lenses (meaning, fully Ai-s compatible), but have an internal focus motor. Only long tele lenses were made in AF-I variants. ↩︎
  8. As of this writing, the following Nikon dSLRs fully support Aperture priority and manual metered modes on Nikkor Ai lenses: D2, D3, D4, D5, D6, D200, D300, D300s, D500, D600, D610, D700, D750, D780, D800, D800E, D810, D850, D7000, D7100, D7200 ↩︎

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