I've been testing my cameras, got around to my Argus C3, for a inexpensive camera I can see why they sold so many of them. No frills, accurate rangefinder, my shutter is accurate, it all works and not much to go wrong. Even the every ready case is nicely made. Reminds me of my Federal Enlarger, American made for the masses, not fancy, but well made, solid.
Indeed; I bought mine around the end of 1957, used it for a number of years, and came back to it in 2006 upon learning an organization called the Argus Collectors Group was promoting "Argus Day." That occurs annually, a year and one day after the previous year's event. The event began in 2001 -- on Argust 1st -- yeh, a little play on August there. So this year it will be on Argust 20th!
From time to time I've posted Argus Day shots in my gallery here; there are many more in my PBase galleries. In a few recent years I've shot some Panatomic-X from a bulk roll I was gifted -- expiration: December 1988 -- just to complete the sense of time. Unquestionably it has given a decent account of itself. Along the way I have done a modest CLA and a rangefinder calibration, plus a bit of an overhaul on the aperture mechanism in the 50mm Cintar lens. Ya gotta like a camera you can operate on with a screwdriver and needle-nosed pliers!
I just refurbished my two Argus Bricks. I wonder if anyone has pictures of any with fancy coverings. As you all know, the covering needs to come off to service the shutter. So, rather than putting the old, brittle cover back in place, I wanted to try some fancy covering. I have two teenage daughters and I'd like to make them fashionable for them, to see if they have some interest.
I was thinking like white, pink or bright yellow or ostrich (fake of course).
Another thing I noticed. Even though I also have an Argus C44 owned since new, the C44 is clumsy, hard to use and the lens is not that great compared to almost any other rangefinder out there. So I never use it. Well, the Brick is even harder to use, but somehow transcends that in a way I can't describe. Maybe the brick is more fun to use. Or that the brick is-what-it-is and does pretend to be a Leica and fail miserably.
For a triplet lens, it is very nice, even wide, not too bad. Someday I might get around to testing it, have not shot any color, might be a problem, my example is a later model with a single coated lens.
The Argus C3 was the non-fixed focus camera I ever used. While there are many other cameras I would prefer to use, I still have a bit of a soft spot for the hard brick.