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Fuji GW 690 Prices Japan


Drew..... as an examiner on a guides course... i wouldn't stop the flow of the day of to set up a view camera and take a photo. You're right about Sella.... he's my hero.
(BTW you can't tell the precariousness of a situation by one photo. But we know your penchant for one upsmanship here.)
 
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Prices aren't going down...
 
But we know your penchant for one upsmanship here.)

You mean you don't believe the story of climbing K2 solo in an afternoon while carrying a 16x20 camera and managing to get a 27 stop range of tones on Tmax 100? Naturally, the images were perfectly sharp despite having to work around the sonic booms from passing Concordes
 
The GW670III I bought has 211 on the counter. All my other cameras are 6x6 and I think I like this format better.

There is a genuine premium on the GW670/III, it is comparatively rare. But the 6x7 format is a dream compared with other 6x7 cameras available, mine is 'mint' and has 170 on the counter (maybe plus that for however many times it been rolled over?) but equates to just 1700 shutter actuations based on one digit equals ten actuations, so a long way to go for 9,900 shots when the counter resets from 999.
 
Greg - guiding parties? That would sure limit your personal time. One upmanship wasn't the point. I know you've done some tricky shooting yourself, but was trying to be more teasing than bragging. Really early on I used an ice axe attachment to mount my P67. It wasn't very versatile. I moved on to 4x5 for the next several decades, and when I got back into 6x7 again, most of our glaciers here were already gone! Just a handful left in the High Sierra now. And we've just had the hottest March on record which melted 80 to 90% of this winter's snowpack.

Yesterday ran into a fellow on my very modest knee workout ridge up the canyon from me who had seen Chogolisa from a distance from a high pass in Ladakh, but didn't remember the name of the peak. But it's enormous. That's where a climbing companion of my nephew was kidnapped by his own Pakastani Liaison officer and held for ransom.
When he finally managed to escape, he published a book, Dangerous Liaisons (John Climaco). My nephew was on the Chinese side of K2 & Broad Peak at the time.

(Incidentally, Craig, at the time, my nephew was with the man who discovered that remote side of the Karakoram for the very first time, from the summit of Broad Peak on its first ascent - the legendary Kurt Diemberger - also the oldest man to ever climb K2, and sole survivor of its most lethal incident - and also a mountain photographer who's 35mm work is, uh, er, well, let's just say, rather disappointing once you've seen what Sella did in that part of the world). I don't know about Concordes, but Tibetan Geese have been spotted flying higher than the summits of K2 and Everest, and have much better fuel economy, and maybe a little spatter in the wake, but no contrails.

Getting older has its disadvantages. My companion on my last long mtn trek slipped in a motel shower last week and broke his collarbone. Bones get brittle. My finger joints have a lot of pain. No more steep stuff for me - not even a tall extension ladder. (I've improvised a long pole detail sander to reach high trim on the outside of my house - I'm surprised nobody had tried to market one of those).
 
I crashed my F-18 onto Denali and had to ski down using a toboggan made from my 20x24 plate holders!
 

There certainly is now, but before the rush, the 67 was the cheapest....i guess since other 6x7 were available....