A 120-film Kodak Tourist discovery
Hello From a New Member... You have a great forum here! Over the years, I've assembled quite a few cameras, including a Kodak Tourist (Anaston 4.5 lens), Monitor 620, Agfa Ventura 66 Deluxe, and ANSCO Titan. I'm going to start testing the Tourist first, and wanted to share a discovery about using 120 film directly in the camera.
The following statement isn't new knowledge, but if you Dremel down the metal ridges at the bottom of the supply chamber and add an approximately 2/16-inch-thick "plastic donut" spacer where the ridges had been, you can just slip in a 120 roll... if it's on a plastic spindle whose flanges you have trimmed back to the edge of the film).
NOTE: I have not yet adapted the take-up chamber to accept 120 spools. So (for the time being) I'll still have to back-spool, or ask my processor to return the 620 spool to me.
My real discovery (I think) is that my Tourist also came with the optional Adapter Kit, which included a second camera back. And when this back is set to either its "2/14 SQ" or "828" settings, you get a 120-compatible film-number viewing window that is smack in the center of the camera back! (Sadly, my Kodak Monitor 620 won't also accept this back without some unacceptable major surgery... BUT the Tourist Adapter kit's film-plane masks for 4x6 1/2-frame, 2-1/4-square, and 828 images--along with the 828 film adapters-- DO seem to fit into the Monitor! You'd just have to guess the appropriate winding amounts for these formats.)
And speaking of 828 film, I did manage to adapt a cute Kodak Bantam (with Anastar lens) to shoot 35mm film. I didn't do surgery, but instead, figured out how to (in a changing bag) remove the film from its canister and load it into the camera. Then, winding amounts were by "guess and by golly." (With the addition of a square mask glued to the film plane, I actually got 42 images from a 24-exposure roll.) And the Anastar lens produced wonderfully sharp, colorful photos (I was using hyperfocal focusing settings computed from one of the calculators available on the web).
Perhaps, I could similarly use film-plane masking and the Tourist Adapter's 828 film carriers to take true panoramic images on 35-mm film? Who knows!
Again, I'm going to try the Tourist with 120 film soon... hopefully, with Kodak's Chromogenic B/W. If anyone has already done so, I'd love to hear how it went. I'd also love to hear about any other similar experiments others have done.
Thanks!
Dave