I call them what camera makers call them. Reading through Bronica sales materials they seem to be suggesting what I was hoping for, but what you say is what I was actually expecting yet not hoping for.Eypiece-correcting lenses (diopter lenses as you call them) are single elements. They can be either a converging- or a dispersing lens.
What they are intended for is getting the ground-screen in focus again for ones non-standard (non-focusing) eyes. With those eyes one cannot exchange them without losing focus.
What got me started this thread were reported by some users concerns about viability of Bronica's Rotary Finder in general use being darker and someone even stating it had zero magnification (in fact it is 0.82 X) and thus was no help in achieving quick and good focus. The finder itself is surely not for every occasion as it quite large and rather heavy to begin with. But it does provide some viewing access with large eye cup. Given that Bronica produced diopters for this finder from +1.5 to - 4.5 I figure I ask if this might be a way to enlarge image without resorting to any other solution.Well, I was speaking of photographers who no longer can focus (sufficiently) any more.
Anyway, all manufacturers of system-SLRs at least offered as attachment to their eyepieces at least a magnifying loupe (with adjustable focusing). Moreover, some of the right-angle attachments offered an added loupe feature too. These are also offered by 3rd party manufacturers.
However such loupes only show a central fraction of the ground-screen image. Maybe you want full coverage.
What led me to strat this was Bronica's own brochure where they state finder's magnification while also specifically stating with what mounted diopter that ratio applies to, implying there is a connection. Bronica does not make to my knowledge any specific magnifying device for ETRS at least (like Mamiya's chimney adjustable magnifier for RB I have, which is great) for critical focusing. There is a chimney for EC and S line but I don't remember if that has magnification built in.I don't think they'll work for what you want. The just adjust the focus point for your eyes. Default is 1 meter, but the diopter brings it closer for further away optically. I don't think it has any impact on magnification (I say that because on my F4 which has adjustable diopter, when I adjust, it changes focus, but not size at all.) I don't think Bronica made a viewfinder magnifier attachment, but you might look to see if some other brand's magnifier fits. This is the one I'd want, if it fits:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/MINT-Asahi...r-for-6x7-67-67II-From-Japan-108/143399168183
What led me to strat this was Bronica's own brochure where they state finder's magnification while also specifically stating with what mounted diopter that ratio applies to, implying there is a connection.
I am still puzzled by all above and finders we're discussing being supplied standard with a -1.5 diopter designation. Wouldn't that be a Zero? .
What he said.(As a side note: correcting lenses for eypieces as offered by the camera manufacturer may be designated either for their own diopter value, or for the effective value for the combo of the correcting lens with the eyepiece.)
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