Okay. Where to begin....
I've never been a particular fan of the 6x7 format. Nothing wrong with it but it's so close to square that I tended to crop to square a lot of the time. Therefore, I found my Mamiya 7 was becoming increasingly redundant. I've always like panoramas - not the big, sweeping 360 degree versions but the "Colin Prior calendar" versions. I'd lusted after an Xpan since they came out in the late 1990s but never taken it any further. That changed when I was looking at a website dedicated to XPan photos (from Flickr). What really pushed me over the edge were a couple of awesome photos posted on here by Paul Mitchell, a former XPan user, top-notch photographer and general nice guy.
At this point, I'd decided I had plenty of other SLR and TLR MF gear and, by coincidence, I saw an XPan c/w 45mm and 90mm lenses for sale at a photographic emporium of my acquaintance. Coincidentally, this shop also specialises in selling Mamiya 7 kit. An enquiry for a potential trade was made and a deal was struck to swap my Mamiya 7 kit for the Hassy XPan and aforementioned lenses - plus a few other goodies I "needed"....ahem
Then the subject of the 30mm lens raised it's head. This lens is a bit of a legend and is currently considerably outside of my budget. However, a chance viewing of a thread on another website highlighted that there is an adapter available that allows Nikon lenses to be attached to the XPan body allowing wider lenses to be used. The website posted a couple of photos taken with a 35mm/f2.8 PC-E (Perspective Control) lens. This
had to be investigated further.
I don't have any PC-E lenses and, quite honestly, I don't intend buying any just now but, for a modest sum, I bought the adapter and tried it with my Nikkor 24mm/f2.8 AF, hoping that the wide angle of view would cover the 24x65mm panoramic frame.
The first shot (of the tree) was taken using the 45mm/f4 Hasselblad (Fujinon?) lens. Really happy with this and the centre-spot filter has done a good job controlling the vignetting. The second shot was with the adapter and 24mm/f2.8 AF lens combo. As you can see, it's not ideal by any means. However, I managed to crop the scanned image to the same aspect ratio as the shot of the church and the end result isn't too bad IMO - especially as a photo from the same position using the 45mm/f4 lens can only just get the body of the church in the frame - but not the roof. It also didn't require a centre-spot filter and the extreme edge of the built-in viewfinder is just about the right coverage for the area in the photo.
One day, perhaps, I will buy the 30mm/5.6 lens but, if I can get acceptable results from the adapter and Nikkor combo on the occasions when I need or want a wider option, it's at least do-able.
Here's the photos. All shot on Ilford XP2 Super (as usual) and scanned using my Epson V750 and processed via LR4/Elements 11 with little more than a levels layer, crop, resize and sharpen.