Neil Grant
Member
..what are the pitfalls of a used, but not ancient, Master Technika?
Weight, cost, no rear movement -- but if the price is right and if you like shooting off-tripod, WEEGEE...
Weight, cost, no rear movement -- but if the price is right and if you like shooting off-tripod, WEEGEE...
there is some, limited rear movement by loosening the rear thmbscrews, pulling the back out then you can make some limited movements.
What a MT is and can do should be pretty easy to find online. A couple comments from owning one--
• the bellows are not on frames, so if they're bad its a bit of work to replace. Not impossible, but not easy.
• the later MTs had a focus rail inside the camera as well as on the main bed. This made it easier to focus very short lenses. I think that feature began with the MT 2000. Mine doesn't have it and with a flat board, I can barely get a 90mm onto the main rails, so anything wider will need a recessed board.
• the top flap that allows rise on the front standard with very short lenses is actually hinged by the leathertte, so if thats in bad shape the flap may not stay in place well.
aside from that they're simple and easy to use. Maybe a touch costly, but mine cost less than the Shen Hao I bought before it they're almost the same weight--2.6kg vs 2.4kg.
I'd worry how well it would handle the 72xl.
You're better off with a rail camera. The Linhof's closed-box design makes working with wide-angle lenses awkward. That's also true of wooden folding field cameras, by the way.
I'd suggest a Toyo VX125; well-made, compact, designed for the focal lengths that you mention.
LF photograph is difficult enough without fighting your gear.
My Chamonix (folding wood field camera) can use down to a 75 without much effort-- not much movement, but you can focus to infinity.
I have to disagree with Mark S-- I have a Cambo SC with the standard 21" bellows, and even folded up, it's a pain to use with any lens shorter than 120mm. Even with a bag bellows, the two standards collide (which to be fair, is probably an idiosyncrasy of the Cambo). My Chamonix (folding wood field camera) can use down to a 75 without much effort-- not much movement, but you can focus to infinity. A bag bellows would help with the movements.
From your posts it seems you really want to use the 72mm XL- and I will tell you from experience it is an awkward lens to use on a Technika. The huge front element, mounted on a small recessed board on that small front standard is not a winning combination if you intend to use it more than occasionally.
The Cambo SC is horribly unsuited to using any wide angle lenses. Using that camera to judge monorail wide angle lens suitability or usability is akin to using a Visoflex to judge SLR photography.
But Cambo's main business back then was catalog houses and budget users who were shooting table top stuff, so there was no real call for using wide angle lenses on the SC- it was the wrong tool for the job.
Nobody who required constant use of wide angles with any movement back in the film days was using a Cambo. Sinar, Arca Swiss and the Linhof Technikardan were the monorails of choice for that kind of work.
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