Isaiah Dominguez
Member
I had no Idea there was thay option lol thxHow about looking for cameras of this website's Classifieds?
I had no Idea there was thay option lol thxHow about looking for cameras of this website's Classifieds?
Good idea, but to post most ads in the Classifieds, you need to first become a paying subscriber here.Post a Want to Buy ad
Good idea, but to post most ads in the Classifieds, you need to first become a paying subscriber here.
I suggest that being a paid subscriber is a really good value, but I am biased.
There is nothing stopping a non-paying member from buying things listed in the Classified section.
I thought it was Gotta Acquire Stuff..GAS == Gadget Acquisition Syndrome
The Slow Speeds will have a winding sound, it uses a clockwork mechanism- kind of like a toaster oven.
For $200 you should expect better.
Hey I took it to my local repair shop just to make sure and within 2 hours after dropping it off they told me there was nothing to clean i also sent them the pictures I posted here ans said most like condensation bcz they aren't seeing anything to clean.
Have you tried a "Want to Buy" ad here, or on other Camera Forums?
Yeah but idk I can still see the hazyness if I look with a flash light n scratch/hair in the lens. Idk about lens at all lol but still looks dirty to me Imma find someone willing to clean it, but yes everything else looks brand new.I've had that happen once on a Kodak Retina 135/4, that was shipped by air. Inner surfaces all hazed up. I had to pop the glass to get the condensation off.
That is good news, and looks like you got a good camera. I looked through my Canonet, was clear. I have a Minolta 7s-II that had some fungus that cleaned off, no effect on images. But the pictures you showed- looked like Canonets that I had to replace the glass.
I was just waiting for a "I just want to try an RF camera", THAT- I can do something about!
Thanks manAt this point- just use this 40+ year old camera. If the repair Tech thought it not worth opening up to clean, that's because it is clean enough to use and a repair attempt might make things worse. "Been There, Done That, Regretted It, Learned that 95% is good enough". The images made through this lens will tell you what you need to know, rather than a flashlight test.
Post some images back. I've put some up with my Canonet that I consider to be clean.
Stop with the flashlight, almost any older lens will look horrible. Shoot a roll of film with the camera and another roll in a camera that passes the flashlight test. Do the same scenes. Then compare the results. I listed some nice rangefinders here and then withdrew the ad because people wanted me to shine a flashlight through them. They both tale lovely contrasty photos so I'll just keep them. I was asking $100 for my Canonet G17 but you wouldn't have liked it.At this point- just use this 40+ year old camera. If the repair Tech thought it not worth opening up to clean, that's because it is clean enough to use and a repair attempt might make things worse. "Been There, Done That, Regretted It, Learned that 95% is good enough". The images made through this lens will tell you what you need to know, rather than a flashlight test.
Post some images back. I've put some up with my Canonet that I consider to be clean.
I have a GIII (I paid $3 for it) but I would prefer the older ones that made in Japan.Thankyou- The GIII is well known, many more produced than the "new Canonet Ql17" and the "Canonet QL17L". These models often get overlooked, not as many made, and was not marked as the GIII model was. I picked them up cheaper than the GIII, found the overall quality a bit better.
https://global.canon/en/c-museum/product/film74.html
Hey since you seem experienced with canonets I was wondering do I need an adapter for a lr44 1.5v battery of can I use it without one ?Thankyou- The GIII is well known, many more produced than the "new Canonet Ql17" and the "Canonet QL17L". These models often get overlooked, not as many made, and was not marked as the GIII model was. I picked them up cheaper than the GIII, found the overall quality a bit better.
https://global.canon/en/c-museum/product/film74.html
The LR-44 is too small and the voltage is too high (which doesn't damage the camera) so you would need adapter both to fit and to have the correct voltage. That is why I use the alkaline 625A which fits perfect.Hey since you seem experienced with canonets I was wondering do I need an adapter for a lr44 1.5v battery of can I use it without one ?
The LR44: I've used these in this Canonet with a little home-made spacer to keep it in place. The voltage is 1.5v, as is the 625a. The discharge curve of the 625a is steeper.
"Years ago", when I was cleaning the VF/RF of the Canonet: I adjusted the pots on inside the camera for the meter to work properly with the 1.5v batteries, matching exposure using my Nikon F2AS.
I will state IT DOES NOT MATTER. I use Auto Exposure on mine with the LR44. Low-Light shots on previous page. My camera is accurate across the metering range. Who makes up this stuff and how do they prove it? Badly exposed images? Don't blame the battery, learn how to use the camera.There is an ongoing discussion about using lr44 or sr44 batteries in a QL17 GIII, with some claiming it only matters a little and others claiming you are chancing Purgatory for film if you do no use the correct battery substitute.
Use an 'O' ring from Harbor Freight, which come in inexpensive assortments of SAE and Metric, to center the SL or LR 44 battery and do no look back, or install or have a experienced workman install it for you; it's a tight fit.
Otherwise forget the meter, and shoot "Sunny 16" really f11, or use another meter for critical work.
Enjoy your camera and do no let battery choices hold you up.
IMO
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