Hello,
I'm new to the wolrd of rangefinders and just got myself a Voigtlander R3A with a 40/1.4. Lovely little camera and I'm liking the rangefinder experience. I have a couple of questions on it thought:
First, I find that the shutter speeds are nearly impossible to see on the R3A in the finder. Is that what is to be expected? If I place my eye to see the shutter speeds I can't see the patch, if I see the patch I can't pretty much see the shutter speeds. This is even worse in bright light and more difficult with the extreme speeds (ie the ones to the edge of the finder). I don't care for it that much but it would be nice to know what the camera is trying to do when I use aperture priority. I generally find the finder a bit cramped, I should probably have gone for the R2A to get a bit more space around the 35/40 lines.
Second, I already have a Leica R8 with a 50/2 Summicron and would like to get a similar look with the R3A. I can mount a Leica 50/2 (obviously M mount) without adapters on the R3A. Correct?
Thanks!
I'm new to the wolrd of rangefinders and just got myself a Voigtlander R3A with a 40/1.4. Lovely little camera and I'm liking the rangefinder experience. I have a couple of questions on it thought:
First, I find that the shutter speeds are nearly impossible to see on the R3A in the finder. Is that what is to be expected? If I place my eye to see the shutter speeds I can't see the patch, if I see the patch I can't pretty much see the shutter speeds. This is even worse in bright light and more difficult with the extreme speeds (ie the ones to the edge of the finder). I don't care for it that much but it would be nice to know what the camera is trying to do when I use aperture priority. I generally find the finder a bit cramped, I should probably have gone for the R2A to get a bit more space around the 35/40 lines.
Second, I already have a Leica R8 with a 50/2 Summicron and would like to get a similar look with the R3A. I can mount a Leica 50/2 (obviously M mount) without adapters on the R3A. Correct?
Thanks!