Data sheet: Tamron 105 mm f/2.5 BBAR MULTI C (adaptall)

Pekka Buttler, 03/2026

Pictured: Tamron 105 mm f/2.5 BBAR MULTI C, here with adapter for Miranda mount

Specifications

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

Brand:TamronLens name1:2.5 f=105 mm BBAR MULTI C
Focal length(s) 1105 mmAngle-of-view 223°
Maximum Aperturef/2.5In Production1976–1979
Lens mounts (native)Tamron AdaptallOther lens mounts See article on Adaptall
Length 351,9 mm (without adapter)
63,5 mm (with Miranda
adapter)
Diameter 469,2 mm
Filter ring diameter52 mmWeight258 grams (without adapters)
340 grams (with Miranda adapter=
Lens element count4Lens group count4
Aperture blades (S/R/C) 56 SFocus throw190 °
Minimum focusing distance
(measured)
127 cmsMaximum magnification
(measured)
1:10,1
Has manual aperture ringYESHas manual focus ringYES
Aperture mechanism typeAutomaticAperture click stops
(on preset ring) 6
2.5•4•5.6•8•11•16-22

Further notes:
• This lens was designed to use the Tamron Adaptall intermediate mount
• Tamron has always had its own coding scheme for lens designs. This coding scheme is extremely useful to discern between two (or more) lenses that have the same mainline specifications (focal length and maximum aperture). According to the Tamron coding scheme, this lens is “Model CT-105”.
• During 1972–1973 Tamron manufactured a predecessor mode – the Tamron 105 mm f/2.5 Adapt-a-matic – referred to internally as the JOG-25AU
• This lens was Tamron’s last 105 mm prime lens.

Versions

Nothing indicates that there were more than version of the Tamron CT-105.

Adapting

Given that this lens uses an intermediate mount, there are several ways to go, depending on what your intention is

If you intend to adapt your Tamron Adaptall lens to a dSLR…

There are original Tamron Adaptall adapters to both Pentax K and Nikon F (Ai) available. These adapters allow you to use the tamron Adaptall lens as if it was a native (manual focus) lens (including aperture and aperture priority exposure automation). There are also modern adapters available from several adapter manufacturers, but – in general – these adapters are dumb adapters and do not allow aperture control.

If your dSLR is a Canon EF or Sony/Minolta A and Four thirds camera, you can get an aftermarket dumb adapter, but will have to manually control aperture.

To film SLRs?
You’re in luck, because there used to be Adaptall/Adaptall-2 adapters made for pretty much every mainstream SLR system available before the mid-70s, (including at least7: Canon FD*, Contax/Yashica*, Fujica X†, Konica AR*, M42 (several variants8), Mamiya Z°, Minolta SR*, Miranda°, Nikon F° (Pre-Ai and Ai), Olympus OM*, Pentax K (K° and A† versions), Praktica B†, Rollei QBM° and Topcon RE° (Exakta). What you need to do is head to your favourite online classifieds platform and procure an adapter (adapters for dSLR mounts are still available new).

Notes:
* Available both as Adaptall 1 and 2 (with different features)
° Available only as Adaptall 1
† Available only as Adaptall 2

To Mirrorless
If you already have a number of adapters from the typical SLR mounts to your mirrorless camera (e.g. Canon FD / M42 / Nikon F / Olympus OM / Pentax K …) your best choice is to either:

  • get an original Tamron adapter from Adaptall to whatever your most favoured SLR era lens mount is or
  • get a modern Tamron adapter to mirrorless adapter from one of the contemporary adapter manufacturers (K&F Concept seems to offer dumb adapters for Adaptall to most mirrorless mounts)

Of these, the earlier option is likely to be cheaper and the later less finicky.

History of Tamron

A short history of Tamron can be found as part of the Tamron company profile.

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. This list will only contain adapters that we at JAPB have witnessed.  ↩︎
  8. There were both adaptall adapters to vanilla M42 mounts as well as some of the M42 variants (such as Fujica M42, Mamiya M42, Praktica electronic M42). For details, see the JAPB article on the m42 mount.

    ↩︎

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