Tom Stanworth
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- Sep 4, 2003
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Um, Tom, I don't understand why you people keep on talking about standard issue when DIY is possible.
My little 38/4.5 Biogon of nothing at all wasn't blindingly expensive. I use it on a Century Graphic with a 2x3 back, also not blindingly expensive. The lens actually covers 87 mm, although outside ~84 mm the image is very dim. So I get badly vignetted 2x3 or some what less vignetted 6x7 or completely unvignetted 6x6 negs. The 2x3 allows cropping to ~ 25 x 82.
Why use a Mamiya 7 or an SWC or an Alpa 12 and settle for less?
Cheers,
Dan
Thanks Dan. I am offically one of 'those people'. I always felt like an outsider - Excellent!
My reasoning was that a bellows based folding camera is a very different beast to a non folding Alpa or Mamiya 7. I felt guilty chipping in about the Mamiya 7 let alone a bellows based press camera. One thing I will say, is that there is a world of difference between a folding bellows camera and a non folder when it comes to very short lenses. In my experience you really have to have exceptional alignment to get the results these lenses are capable of. If shooting at wider apertures this of course becomes absolutely critical. I have seen it myself with folding cameras. Most just are not up to it, esp where bellows compression can cause standards to be pressed off square as the leather buches up.
As for the 38 biogon, I have no doubt that it is exceptional and probably has a different look to the Mamiya 43mm. I know Roger feels his 38mm one of his Magic lenses and fair enough as images come in a variety of flavours not all of which can be quantified in resolution terms. The Mamiya lenses are however extremely contrasty which has been a real Zeiss strength for years. Certainly the ngs I have printed and chromes I have seen have been astounding. Personally if I could afford an Alpa with one lens, I would instead take a couple of Mamiya 7 II bodies plus the set of lenses and enjoy the change. If Rogers style means he has no need for the wider aperture selective focus performance it is teh Mamiya offers little to add. There is no doubt that Alpas must evoke the same pride of ownership and pasion of Leicas. A Mamiya 7 is not the same!
I have had an MPP Mk 7, a 6x9 view camera, a TLR and none of them did it for me, but they work well for others (non folding view cameras however do - ie RSW45, Walker 57XL). My current favourite all rounder, the Bronica 645 really does it for me, as I can work so fast and effectively with it. The Mamiya 7 is similar in this regard if a touch slower. Both are miles faster than a press folder and in many respects less awkward. In terms of lens performance, MF lenses do in some cases blow away LF at the wider to middle apertures and sink down to join them when diffraction comes into play. I have seen with my own eyes that a Mamiya 7 neg from the 80mm will beat the same shot from a 90mm off a 6x7 back on a 5x4 camera. My reasons for sugesting the Mamiya is that when shooting wider, you can do things an Alpa cannot do (at least not quickly and without GG) and enjoy a far better optical performance than any folder will give you for the reasons stated. Stopped down, they all merge together. See the Perez tests on the Mamiya 6 and 7 lenses if you want to see how they stack up. I can say from having printed them that they are really are that good. I just cannot see any camera with joints and standards being able to exploit the 38 biogon to its full. Maybe I am wrong.