Thanks for providing that most excellent resource! I'm pretty sure what I'm looking for is described on that page.There is a lot of information already out there if you try to find it. Please read Mercury Camera's page:
https://mercurycamera.com/accessories-2/accessory-range-finder-roundup/
To be clear, I am not looking for a rangefinder camera. I want a device to measure distances to help me set the focus distance on cameras with zone focusing.
A quick online search shows the major markets for this kind of device seem to hunters and golfers. I think devices made for hunters and golfers are possibly optimised for longer distances? As a photographer, I am more concerned about accuracy in the range of 1 to 25 meters than I am at 100 or 1000 meters.
Any tips or specific recommendations from photographers?
I can estimate distance much better than I can set that distance on the focusing ring so the accurate rangefinder isn't useful to me. What about a laser distance sensor? You may not want to use it for people they are accurate at close distance 30ft or less and not too expensive. Farther distance you really don't need.
Something like this should be just fine https://www.amazon.com/RockSeed-Dis...11646395011_d_sccl_2/142-2080171-9458716?th=1
Just on the idea you don’t need to worry about focus at farther distances. It all depends on the focal length of the lens you’re trying to focus.
Probably all true, but this wouldn't be Photrio if we didn't@runswithscissors, I appreciate that you have identified the need for another gadget, and I've succumbed to that a few times myself in the past. But it's another item to bother about, and the whole point of zone focussing is to make things simpler. So please excuse my perversity, but I’d like to argue the case that you don’t need another gadget! I suspect you know all that follows already, but here goes nevertheless.
Presently I have two point-and-shoot cameras, one with zone focusing. But I am considering the possibility of getting a 6x9 folding camera, and I believe many of those will require scale focusing, right?If you really do mean zone focussing, and not just scale focusing, then you are using a small aperture to maximise depth of field and make distance judging less critical. In this way, you only need to think in terms of a few types of subject (e.g. close-up, portrait, groups, landscapes) and equally few focus settings.
I'm afraid the framelines of my point-and-shoot cameras are not going to be very good indicators. Both cameras shoot rectangular images, but the viewfinders are square, so must be inaccurate in at least one dimension.If you simply want to make best use of scale-focussing, then besides the clever human rangefinder already mentioned, you already possess helpful yardsticks: the distance you can reach in front of you; your own height (imagine yourself lying prone); your own height plus outstretched arm; twice your own height (also easy to imagine - my limit is three times, though). Then, note at what distance does a human figure fit comfortably within the framelines of your camera in portrait mode, and in landscape model. If you are photographing objects further away still, they are likely not time-critical, and you could pace it out. Infinity isn't far away, even with a 50mm lens at full aperture.
My Holga/Diana-style Debonair shoots 6×4.5 cm and has a 60mm lens with a single fixed aperture of f8. I just finished the first roll, so will soon see how well zone focusing is working for me.If you are using a wide angle lens, accuracy is less critical, and infinity closer. My only scale-focusser (a Rollei 35) has an f/3.5 40mm lens, and everything beyond about 35ft (11m) is effectively at infinity whatever the aperture, or at f/8 everything beyond about 25ft (8m).
My main interest in range finder accessories is for the possibility of getting a 6x9 folding camera which lacks a built-in rangefinder. I was kind of hoping to find a folding 6x9 camera with a less-than-modern lens, and I'm pretty sure none of the less-sophisticated models are going to have built-in rangefinders, right?Even if you do get an accessory rangefinder, you will need to transfer its measurements to the lens focus ring. How accurate do you suppose the markings are on the lens? To get critical optical performance from a lens, a coupled rangefinder, an SLR, or a LF camera with focussing screen are the only options that make sense to me. It's not really the strength of scale-focussing cameras.
I have already eliminated range finders which rely on lasers from consideration.I don't imagine I have persuaded you, so good luck with the new gadget! Do let us know how useful it proves to be.
PS - Also beware that laser rangefinders are not accurate in photogenic misty conditions or rain, the longer distances being most affected of course.
Laser distance devices have dramatically improved, as long as it's a reputable pro brand, and will be far more precise at short to medium range than an optical rangefinder, potentially within millimeters. I see that one of the Bosch models was posted; I was one of the first people to test that as a major Bosch distributor, along with Spectra and PLS equivalents. The problem will be very long distances approaching infinity.
Handheld optical rangefinders can be selected from rifle applications as well as from scientific optical suppliers like Edmund. But for bargains, one can always try scrounging from military surplus sources.
Can anyone who has used both folders with (uncoupled) built-in rangefinders and shoe-mount-type range finders such as the Kodak Service Rangefinder or the Watameter -- how do they compare? Are the brightness and ease-of-focus approximately the same?
I agree, it might be better to get a folding camera which does have a built in range finder, but I wonder about this: Can anyone who has used both folders with (uncoupled) built-in rangefinders and shoe-mount-type range finders such as the Kodak Service Rangefinder or the Watameter -- how do they compare? Are the brightness and ease-of-focus approximately the same?
This thread has greatly improved my knowledge of rangefinder accessories. I have an older cold shoe one myself - can’t recall the brand but looks like some of those above referenced. Despite my efforts to calibrate it it wasn’t accurate when tested against a cheap laser device. Which means nothing in the scheme of things other than that these accessories are old and a fairly high percentage of them don’t work well anymore.
Aside from the iPhone lidar tool mentioned above, and the Bosch construction industry laser tool which is quite pricy, I’m still puzzled as to why nobody seems to consider the far less expensive and modern option of a golf / hunting rangefinder. A quick online search indicates they can measure as close as 5 metres / 16 feet. Granted I’ve never actually used one.
Two reasons why I chose not to use a golf/hunting rangefinder, 1-they did not measure close enough and 2-all the ones I saw were too expensive
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