Around 35 years ago I made with scrap material an adapter that would allow the metered prism of the Pentacon Six to be mounted on top of a C330. The reason why I did it was that in those years things like the CdS Porrofinder were basically non-existent in Italy, and would cost a fortune anyway. Contrarywise, after the Berlin Wall came down, accessories for the Pentacon Six were easily available and relatively cheap. The P6 prism would cover the C330 groundglass only partially (around 70% perhaps) and of course recalibrating the meter was tricky, but I managed to have it working somehow.
I see many people did more or less the same thing with the Kiev 66 metered prism. Again, to some degree, this is reasonable. The lack of a real metered prism is the most evident missing part in the Mamiya C system, in my humble opinion. Something I still wonder about today, decades later.
What I really fail to understand is why one would do the same thing with a Rollei prism. It isn't metered, is it? And also pricewise, I figure it would cost more than Mamiya's original prism.
To make a long story short, as (many...) years went by and I begun to have a regular salary and bought large format cameras, I had in any case to resign to use a handheld meter. I still definitely think that handheld meters stink and are a major annoyance compared to a good built-in meter, but that's life. So I progressively quit the chase for a decent metered prism for the Mamiya C. However, recently I stumbled in a like-new CdS metered porrofinder, with case in box, and I frankly admit I felt I had to buy it just because I desired it so much when younger. I tested it but never really used it: its non-coupled spot meter is a pain to use in quick-shot scenarios - which ironically are exactly those in which you would like to have a convenient eye-level prism - and as said above I find it optically disappointing. It's perhaps my only real "collection" piece, with no real use.
