But if one uses B60 filters, the lens caps which uses a bayonet rather than threads, easily goes on. Once a threaded filter is attached to a Hasselblad lens the Hasselblad lens caps will not attach. There is no non-bayonet snap on lens cap that will attach to a Hasselblad lens.
As I posted before I have B+W, Hasselblad an Heliopan B60 filters, many of them I purchased used. For infrared I have the R25A in B60 and I bought Hoya R23, R27, R29 and R72 67mm filters and use a B60-67mm adapter.
It sounds like the camera and lens need a CLA which should clean out the old lubricates, relubricate with fresh lubricates, check the electronics and adjust the shutter.
That assumes the film you want, in the quantity you want, is fresh at any random place you go. How will you know? By making intercontinental calls to every camera stores across the ocean?
Therefore since we can ask for and almost always get hand inspections in the US, I am not as concerned so much in the US. My concerns are travel outside the US.
Since most color and black & white negative films have a SBR of 14 stops, compression is not a factor very often. Compression should be taken care of when one adds contrast time to development and that should not be the driver for the development time, that information should be in choices of...
Exactly and that is why we need development times that produce printable negatives, not printable Grade 2 negative. The criteria should be based on negatives being dense enough to be easily printed with sufficient contrast.
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