Dear Apug Members,
I had recently a chance to use the Contax RTS2 with normal Planar lens, the photos were great,
then last weekend saw someone with AX model who swore by the quality of it.
a) Anybody have experience with this model? Anything to look out for??
b) It looked Robust like cross between F5 and F1n
c) Major differences from RTS2?
d) I would have purchased RTS 2 however body was stickier than my old Nikon F100
e) Any photo examples from this camera would also be appreciated.
f) I have a normal 50mm lens, just looking for a decent body...
Many Thanks!!
Harlequin
That was the RTS III, which also had the ceramic film pressure plate (I think the ceramic plate was also in the ST, but not the vacuum).At least one of these big Contax SLR's has a vacuum pressure plate as well, no?
I have the AX. It feels similar to a Nikon F4, it's a big meaty handful. It's my favorite Contax, over the RX, ST and (barely) the RTSIII. Mine needs a trip to the doctor as it doesn't seem to want to fire when there's a lens attached.
Sounds like your camera suffers from a touch of mirrorslip. You can google it and probably repair it yourself.
You are quite right about the ST's ceramic plate but did you know that about a dozen 167ST's were produced (don't know why) which were the 167MT with an ST ceramic back-plate? I decided to make my own by changing an ST's back for a D-7 and switching it into the 167MT. I was surprised that Contax didn't use the ceramic plate on the AX but to be fair, the standard pressure plates always worked OK, even with Zeiss' most outstanding pieces of glass. Back in the day, I ran a comparative test of the RTSIII, ST and AX using the Zeiss 55 1.2 Planar, 21 f2.8 Distagon and the 100 f4 Bellows (Zeiss' 3 most exacting lenses) to see just how much difference the vacuum ceramic vs ceramic vs standard pressure plates would make - to be honest, I could not see any corner difference even when prints were blown up to A2.That was the RTS III, which also had the ceramic film pressure plate (I think the ceramic plate was also in the ST, but not the vacuum).
Under the heading of "I don't know that it's true, but I believe it", having shot a lot of film through a 167mt, an RX, and an RTS III, to my eye there seems to be some perceptible difference in image quality between the RTS III and the others, using the same lenses. They feel a little bit sharper, a little bit crisper. Theoretically, the vacuum plane and the ceramic pressure plate shouldn't make that much difference especially on 35mm where the film isn't that big in the first place. It made more sense in the 645 camera, but it only worked on 220 film (the backing paper on 120 would interfere with the vacuum), so trying to use the vacuum back on a 645 is pretty much pointless these days.You are quite right about the ST's ceramic plate but did you know that about a dozen 167ST's were produced (don't know why) which were the 167MT with an ST ceramic back-plate? I decided to make my own by changing an ST's back for a D-7 and switching it into the 167MT. I was surprised that Contax didn't use the ceramic plate on the AX but to be fair, the standard pressure plates always worked OK, even with Zeiss' most outstanding pieces of glass. Back in the day, I ran a comparative test of the RTSIII, ST and AX using the Zeiss 55 1.2 Planar, 21 f2.8 Distagon and the 100 f4 Bellows (Zeiss' 3 most exacting lenses) to see just how much difference the vacuum ceramic vs ceramic vs standard pressure plates would make - to be honest, I could not see any corner difference even when prints were blown up to A2.
manual AX uncomplete dont DL also not elsewhere since the all had it stolen from eachother or butkus. when i have time i will upload to FB Contax and Yashica /Contax forums.You can get free manuals at http://www.butkus.org/chinon/contax.htm Please remember that that website is free, so if you find a download useful sent $3 to keep the website running.
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