Canon · Canon FD mount · Prime lens
Canon FD 50mm f/1.4 S.S.C. — adapter compatibility and body matches
The Canon FD 50mm f/1.4 S.S.C. sits on the Canon FD flange geometry (42 mm) — below is every body mount it adapts onto, the autofocus / IS / aperture-control level you should expect, and the specific adapter SKUs that ship the path.
Lens specifications
- Manufacturer
- Canon
- Lens mount
- Canon FD
- Focal length
- 50mm
- Aperture
- f/1.4 – f/22
- Lens type
- Prime
- Image stabilization
- No
- Weight
- 305 g
- Filter thread
- 55 mm
- Released
- 1973
Background & adapter context
Full-frame coverage. Original FD breech-lock chrome-nose version carrying Canon's then-new Super Spectra Coating. Distinctive warm, low-microcontrast rendering wide-open — favoured by cinematographers shooting Sony FE / Canon RF / micro four thirds via a mechanical FD adapter. The New FD 50 f/1.4 (1979) dropped the S.S.C. marking once multi-coating became standard and shaved the weight to 235 g with a 52 mm filter, but both versions share the same optical formula. Pure FD-to-EF cannot reach infinity (42 mm vs 44 mm flange); FD-to-RF / FE / MFT works with a plain mechanical spacer.
Adapting the FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C. onto other bodies
Every feasible body-mount destination for a Canon FD lens, sorted by adapter feasibility. Curated adapter SKUs (linked below) cover the specific lens-side → body-side pairing — pick the row matching the body you own, then click the SKU for the full teardown.
| Body mount | Result | Adapter examples | Caveats |
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Body mount Canon RF | Mechanical |
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Body mount Canon EF-M | Mechanical |
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Body mount Nikon Z | Mechanical |
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Body mount Sony E (incl. FE) | Mechanical |
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Body mount Fujifilm X | Mechanical |
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Body mount Fujifilm GFX (G-mount) | Mechanical |
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Body mount Micro Four Thirds | Mechanical |
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Body mount L-Mount | Mechanical |
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Body mount Leica M | Mechanical |
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Body mount Canon RF (cine) | Mechanical |
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Body mount C-mount | Mechanical |
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Body mount Canon EF | Speed booster |
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Body mount Canon EF-S | Speed booster |
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Body mount Nikon F | Speed booster |
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Body mount Sony A / Minolta A | Speed booster |
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Body mount M42 (Pentax / Praktica screw mount) | Speed booster |
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Body mount Pentax K | Speed booster |
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Body mount PL (Positive Lock) | Speed booster |
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Body mount Canon EF (cine) | Speed booster |
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Body mount Exakta | Speed booster |
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Body mount Praktica B | Speed booster |
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Body mount Konica AR | Speed booster |
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Body mount Minolta SR / MC / MD | Speed booster |
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Body mount Olympus OM | Speed booster |
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Body mount Contax/Yashica (C/Y) | Speed booster |
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About the Canon FD mount
Canon's manual-focus 35 mm SLR mount, introduced on the F-1 in 1971 and produced through 1992 — Canon's last fully-mechanical bayonet before the all-electronic EF transition in 1987. Two mounting generations share the same lens-to-flange dimensions: the original FD (1971-1979) uses a breech-lock collar (a rotating ring at the lens base, no twisting the lens body itself), and the New FD (1979-1992) switched to a conventional bayonet twist while preserving the same 42.0 mm flange and 48.0 mm throat. Pure mechanical: aperture-priority and shutter-priority both communicate via mechanical linkages, no electrical contacts in any iteration. The FD L line — FD 50 mm f/1.4 S.S.C., FD 85 mm f/1.2 L, FD 135 mm f/2 L, FD 200 mm f/1.8 L, FD 300 mm f/4 L — and the legendary FD 55 mm f/1.2 S.S.C. Aspherical remain the most sought-after FD glass for mirrorless adaptation. The 42 mm flange is shorter than EF / Nikon F / Pentax K / Minolta SR, so FD-to-EF / FD-to-Nikon-F (without a corrective optic) cannot reach infinity — FD glass is mirrorless-only territory in practice.
Common questions
- What's the best body to adapt the Canon FD 50mm f/1.4 S.S.C. onto?
- Two strong destinations. First choice: a Canon RF body via the Fotodiox FD-RF preserves the most of the FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C.'s native behaviour (autofocus, in-lens IS where present, electronic aperture). Second choice: a Sony E (incl. FE) body via the Fotodiox FD-NEX — solid fallback when the first body family is unavailable. The /matrix and /picker pages let you compare every feasible adaptation side-by-side.
- Will autofocus work when the FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C. is adapted onto another body?
- No — adapters in our catalogue route the FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C. through a mechanical path on the best-supported body (Canon EF). Focus is fully manual; rely on the body's focus peaking and magnify-to-focus aids to nail focus.
- Does the FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C.'s in-lens image stabilization still work through an adapter?
- The FD 50 f/1.4 S.S.C. has no in-lens IS / VR / OS unit — there's no in-lens stabilisation to pass through. Bodies with IBIS (most modern mirrorless) still stabilise the captured frame, but stabilisation is body-side only.