One question: If you dispose of the small AiS primes, does that mean you are turning away from field work? I have always been amazed at what you were achieving in the field, and most photographers are loathe to take a bellows rig out into the field.
No, I will never turn away from fieldwork, but I appreciate the question.
For the field, I am going to be experimenting with 4 different Nikkor zooms, each of which achieves 1-3x magnification range (which is the max you can do outside). I will keep my favorite, and sell the others.
Rather than carry 3 primes out to the field, I will now just bring the 1 zoom, whichever I feel gives me the most in one package.
For the studio, I am now equipped to go as high as I want.
Interestingly, I almost never used my 50mm AI-S ... either outside or in-studio ... because I already have 1:1 covered.
Now, however, with the bellows, what I am discovering is that my 50mm has has a magnification range of 1.6x to 4x which is the ideal range for live subjects.
I have a feeling my 50mm will quickly become my most-used macro lens, rather than the least-used (at least in the studio).
My 28mm (which got the most use in the field) has now become a 3.2:1 to 7.7:1 on the bellows, which may be useful in certain cases, but not really on spiders. It starts a little too close, really.
My 20mm begins at 5:1 on the bellows, and goes all the way to 11:1. I haven't even tried it yet, but will have to be using dead subjects in order to stack at that kind of magnification.
Maybe I will keep all three primes for my bellows: the 50, the 28, and the 20. They seem to be a natural flow, and may prompt me to go higher and higher in magnification. But I have a feeling most of my work will be on the 50mm and 28mm.
Cheers,