thuggins
Member
I am torn between the Mamiya (any of the various versions) and the Pentax 645n. What are the thoughts and observations from folks who have used them? I am also curious about lens availability, quality and prices.
Ditto. Besides, 645 not that big an advantage over 35mm with regard to negative size, but without the ease of use of 35mm camera. I bought a 654 back for Hassy, but very rarely use it.Before you buy take a look at the 6x6s. Much more flexible, no need to rotate the camera and a much larger negative to crop. If you buy a Hasselblad it will be your last camera. It is a system. Service, parts and lenses are readily available. You will just have to wait a little longer between lenses, but this is a camera system for a lifetime.
By my calculation, a 645 is close to three times the negative area of a 35mm (24x36 vs. 57x42), and I much prefer the 3:4 ratio over the longer 3:2. Plus, a 645 camera can be significantly lighter than a 6x6, lenses are lighter, smaller, and shorter, etc. Ideally, you'd have a revolving back so as not to have to turn the camera horizontals and verticals (my RB67 with 645 back has this, but lacks the "light" feature), but a 645 is light enough that if you have an eye level prism, it's not that big a deal. A Hassy with 645 back gives up the lightness and still needs to be rotated -- but the camera isn't designed for that.
By my calculation, a 645 is close to three times the negative area of a 35mm (24x36 vs. 57x42), and I much prefer the 3:4 ratio over the longer 3:2. Plus, a 645 camera can be significantly lighter than a 6x6, lenses are lighter, smaller, and shorter, etc. Ideally, you'd have a revolving back so as not to have to turn the camera horizontals and verticals (my RB67 with 645 back has this, but lacks the "light" feature), but a 645 is light enough that if you have an eye level prism, it's not that big a deal. A Hassy with 645 back gives up the lightness and still needs to be rotated -- but the camera isn't designed for that.
Plus, a 645 camera can be significantly lighter than a 6x6, lenses are lighter, smaller, and shorter, etc.
OP: I have a friend who's a big Pentax fan/collector/shooter. He loves his 645n setup, but did have to go to a fair bit of trouble to bring it all together - they just aren't out there in the numbers that the Mamiya gear is. For price, availability, and long-term replacement, I'd go with Mamiya.
EDIT: I do have a fair bit of experience with the ETRs system and wouldn't hesitate to recommend it, though it too is not as cheap or available as it used to be.
Don't forget the original Pentax 645. Unless AF is that important, and I cannot see why it would be, I much prefer the original. While push button control is not as cute as 645n, I find 645N much harder to focus manually. There was a screen made for N with split image, but Pentax made very few and they are next to impossible to find and when they show up it is above $200. Non AF lenses are also much less expensive but fantastic quality.
@Sirius Glass
Did Hasselblad ever make a 645 camera?
I know I could search for it but please save me some time by just giving me an answer.
Ditto. Besides, 645 not that big an advantage over 35mm with regard to negative size, but without the ease of use of 35mm camera. I bought a 654 back for Hassy, but very rarely use it.
^^^
Looking purely at the short dimension of the frame, you have 24mm (135) vs 43mm (645), a linear factor of 1.8x, so for a 16" x 20" print you have 16.9x magnification of grain vs 9.45x magnification of grain. It is analogous to comparing a 16" x 20" vs. 8.8" x 11" print when both are printed from a 135 format negative in terms of how apparent grain will appear in each print!.
In making a 'same grain limitation' print from both 135 and 645, you would compare a 16"x20" print (which is the max size for majority of 135 photographers due to grain) vs. a 28.8" x 36" print from 645.
And, assuming the human subject filling 20% of the height of the frame for both 135 and 645, there is 3.24 times as many film grains representing the subject's face, providing better gradation of tonal variation of the subject's face. Small grain size in print, better tonal definition.
Back in the day, in choosing a 645 camera for professional purposes (4x5 film was already the next step up, in my kit), I spent lots of time in a professional-oriented local store, on a number of different days to make up my mind between Mamiya M645, Bronica ETRSi, and Pentax 645. I rapidly ruled out the Pentax because its grip was afixed at the very rear of the camera body, putting ALL of the weight of body and long lens in front of the grip with zero counterbalance to the forward torque! I eventually ruled out the Mamiya because you had to buy special leaf shutter lenses to fire electronic flash at any shutter speed and that cause loss of any Auto Exposure automation using a metering prism. (BTW, that same limitation applied also to the Pentax 645.)
I chose the Bronica ETRSi, I used it heavily for wedding coverage (and other applications) and never once found my choice to be lacking in any aspect of usage. I still own two bodies, 6 lenses, and numerous attachments/accessories and was never tempted to sell it, especially given the sinfully low 10:1 ratio of new price:used price after digital became mainstream.
Yes they make a film back but I found that 645 is not worth anyone's time of day.
See below from others:
OTOH, in printing an 8x10 or 16x20, 6x6 has virtually NO advantage over a 645, both would be using a 56mm x 44mm image area of the film!
@Sirius Glass
Did Hasselblad ever make a 645 camera?
I know I could search for it but please save me some time by just giving me an answer.
...the lens range for the Mamiya 645 is really extensive. In addition to all the 'normal stuff' you'll find fast primes, macros, super-teles, perspective control, a handful of leaf shuttered designs etc. You need to ask yourself what sort of photography you intend to do - then compare the lens ranges. None, with maybe the exception of the 80mm f/1.9, are expensive 'pre-owned'.I am torn between the Mamiya (any of the various versions) and the Pentax 645n. What are the thoughts and observations from folks who have used them? I am also curious about lens availability, quality and prices.
This is a huge myth. The 645 negative is three times larger than the 35mm negative so I am completely confused why people feel the need to say it is no better than 35mm.Ditto. Besides, 645 not that big an advantage over 35mm with regard to negative size, but without the ease of use of 35mm camera. I bought a 654 back for Hassy, but very rarely use it.
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