RaglanSurf
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What do folk on here regard as 'legacy glass'?
Being more serious I tend to think of any lens from a pre digital, pre AF camera systems such as:
Nikon AI/S, Canon FD, Olympus OM, Pentax K & M42, Rollei SL, Minolta MC/MD............ And the list could go on ,

I don't know the full details of the Nikon lens mounts, but if you can still use it without adapters on a current Nikon body, then it's merely discontinued and not yet legacy in my mind!So no Legacy Nikon Glass?
If we're just talking lenses, then I'd say any lens that has no camera currently in production with that lens' native mount - so L39 was legacy until the Bessa's came back into production. Probably none of the k-mount lenses are, though the changes to the metering might make a case for the pre-A variants. If you can only take a pic with a second hand camera or an adapter, then it's legacy in my book.
I had somehow associated it with classic manual focus lenses for a bygone era.
I don't know the full details of the Nikon lens mounts, but if you can still use it without adapters on a current Nikon body, then it's merely discontinued and not yet legacy in my mind!![]()
I know it's splitting hairs, but most definitions of something like "legacy" are going to need some sort of fudge/arbitrary definition at some point!
I have one lens in Exakta fit that I wouldn't use from choice. It meets the my basic definition, but I'd hardly call it legacy.
or one whose maker is no longer in business. That covers large format I think as well.
Large format lenses are still being made.
Steve.
Personally I hate the term legacy as an adjective, but then I feel the same about most Americanisms.
I still think my definition of legacy lenses as relative to the camera is right. My Pentax-M lenses are not legacy lenses for my Pentax MX
I think it's likely the term has been borrowed from computing - legacy code is software that is written for systems no longer manufactured and for which manufacturer support is no longer available (the guy that wrote and understands it has left the company being a common example for software developed in-house).
There's a close relationship to the terms 'unsupported' and the somewhat more pejorative word 'obsolete'. My Canon FD lenses are legacy lenses from a legacy system (Canon don't provide support or parts for them any more). Things get a little hazier when you consider that parts and repairs for some of the earlier EF lenses are no longer available, although the EOS system they are designed for is still actively supported by Canon.
I thinks this really sums up the term 'legacy' as its is used in common parlance today with reference to older system lenses.
Both Canon, when it moved from FD to EOS and Olympus, when they moved from OM mount to the first generation E series cameras, used the term 'Legacy Free' in their respective marketing. The advertising jocks spin on the fact that none of your old lenses would fit their new cameras. It was an attempt to make a virtue of having to buy all new kit!