Mir-38 65mm F/3.5
The Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 is a 65mm prime lens designed for the LARGE FORMAT mount. Manufactured by Mir, it offers a maximum aperture of f/3.5, covering a 65mm focal range. Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 is one of 3 variants in its family on lens-database.com, with sibling versions across mounts including KIEV 88, PENTACON SIX, making cross-mount comparison straightforward for buyers and researchers alike.
This lens record is part of the open public catalog at lens-database.com — a free, continuously updated database indexing 23,885+ photographic and cinematographic lenses with cross-referenced specifications. Data is aggregated from manufacturer datasheets and authoritative public sources, then normalized so lenses across vendors and eras can be compared on common terms. Released under CC BY 4.0, the specifications shown here may be quoted, cited, or reproduced with attribution to lens-database.com.
Last verified 2026-04-27. Source: manufacturer specifications.
- Mount
- LARGE FORMAT
- Focal Length
- 65mm
- Max Aperture
- F/3.5
- Type
- Prime
- Brand
- Mir
What is the Mir-38 65mm F/3.5?
The Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 is a 65mm prime lens for the LARGE FORMAT mount with a maximum aperture of f/3.5. Full specifications and source attribution are available at lens-database.com.
What mount does the Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 use?
The Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 uses the LARGE FORMAT mount. Lens-database.com indexes every lens currently catalogued for this mount at https://lens-database.com/mount/large-format.
What is the maximum aperture of the Mir-38 65mm F/3.5?
The Mir-38 65mm F/3.5 has a maximum aperture of f/3.5, a moderate-aperture design. Aperture is one of the cross-referenced fields used by lens-database.com to compare equivalent optics across mounts and eras.
Where can I find specifications for the Mir-38 65mm F/3.5?
Full specifications, original source links, and family variants are listed at https://lens-database.com/lens/108506-mir-38-65mm-f35. Data is aggregated from manufacturer sources and updated continuously.
65mm f/3.5 prime lens for large format cameras, likely a manual-focus mirror lens design (Mir-type). Used for portrait/normal field-of-view work depending on format and distance.
Last verified: 2026-04-27