Good loupe for small ground glass

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Folks,

I have a Fujifilm GX617 camera that is new to me and I also have the ground glass for it. I figure I won’t necessarily use it too often but when I do, I want to be able to check the focus reasonably with a loupe, so i need to get a loupe.

When I shot LF, I used a few different ones, including the Toyo 4x and I think it was a Horseman tilting loupe, which was a 4x or maybe 6x.

My needs for a loupe are that it has to be pretty thin because the GG isn’t all that large and I won’t be able to get into the corners well with a big fat loupe. It also needs to be long like the old Toyo because the hood is about 2 or so inches on all four sides. Unfortunately, a tilting loupe won’t work because of the hood on the GG.

Maybe it should be one with a square or rectangular bottom on it to get into the corners better?

Anyway, I’m looking for suggestions on options. My impression is that I would like a 6x or maybe 8x and the length needs to be at least 2” and preferably longer, like 3” or so. High eye point would be great since I wear glasses.

Any recommendations are appreciated.

—Michael
 
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It must have been a Silvestri tilting loupe… not Horseman.

the smaller the ground glass, the more critical the loupe is, or at least the more critical the need to get a good one with high enough magnification tow give you good focus confirmation…
 

Nitroplait

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PEAK 1960 x5 is about 2,5" tall. It is not the best in their lineup, but inexpensive. I don't really think I get much value from highly corrected lupes when I am just checking focus, but YMMV.
 

AgX

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A tilting loupe only focuses on a line at the groundglass, not a patch.
 

BrianShaw

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On eBay check out the eTone loupe. 6x. Focusable. Solid construction. Appears to be good glass.

I got one a while ago and was impressed. Unfortunately haven’t used it much yet though. Every time I look at it I’m impressed.
 
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On eBay check out the eTone loupe. 6x. Focusable. Solid construction. Appears to be good glass.

I got one a while ago and was impressed. Unfortunately haven’t used it much yet though. Every time I look at it I’m impressed.

Yes, thanks. I saw that and was wondering how it was... I thought it would meet my requirements. I'll keep that in the list.
 

nosmok

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I use an ancient Burke and James 10x telescope for all my ground-glass magnifying needs. Advantage over the cheap loupes I had before is that it doesn't need to touch the glass, so it's good for tight spots. From evilBay, of course.
 

ridax

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A primitive 16mm-cine-projector lens allows me to focus as precisely as my Peak 7x does. The only difference is that I can use the Peak extensively all day long without any trouble, and with a 16mm projection Petzval I get a real pain in my eye too soon.
 

grat

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eTone makes a 6x loupe that's approximately 4 inches in length and about 1.5" in diameter, with diopter adjustment. Decent image all the way across, and minimal (if any) distortion. Seems reasonably well built, and should survive the occasional drop.
 

eli griggs

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Has anyone here tried a 90mm -135mm ltm, like a Jupiter or Leica, or Canon lens?

How was your finding?
 

BrianShaw

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Has anyone here tried a 90mm -135mm ltm, like a Jupiter or Leica, or Canon lens?

How was your finding?
I've tried it with camera lenses, backward, although not a LTM. It works but awkward. Any kind of loupe worked better fo rme than that option.
 

eli griggs

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Think about close-up monoculars, like the 2x, on up, offerings of this company, https://lssproducts.com/closeup-6x18mm-close-focusing-monocular/

Pay attention to the number after the power multipler ie. 4x 25, as that is key to having a good, easy to read objective, in this case 25mm of pupil relief.

A small number means less light is getting through and you'll struggle to see properly through the tool.

These are made for folks with vision difficulties and may work well enough for our needs.

Cheers.
 
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