Kodachromeguy
Subscriber
Hi Everyone, as part of my search for a light weight camera to take on a Nepal trip, I bought an Olympus Trip 35 from a gent on eBay. Only $25 and it was a beauty. It is somewhat limited by having only two shutter speeds and no practical manual controls at all. But I tried it on a recent drive in Oklahoma and Texas on Route 66 (non-USA readers: this is the same Route 66 from the 1960s television show starring Martin Milner and George Maharis), and I was really happy with the results. The lens is 4-element, probably a Tessar type, but I have not seen a diagram of the configuration.
The body I bought has some haze in the finder, but in that there is no rangefinder mechanism, it really does not matter. My Kodak BW400CN negatives were uniformly exposed; the little selenium light meter mechanism seems to working perfectly. Here are some examples from Route 66. I think the lens from the other camera I tested, a Yashica Electro 35CC is marginally sharper, but it really does not matter. I bought a 43.5mm yellow filter, but for polarizers or other colors, I had to hold 49mm filters manually over the lens. If any of you have any 43.5mm filters you want to sell, please let me know. Thanks for reading.
The body I bought has some haze in the finder, but in that there is no rangefinder mechanism, it really does not matter. My Kodak BW400CN negatives were uniformly exposed; the little selenium light meter mechanism seems to working perfectly. Here are some examples from Route 66. I think the lens from the other camera I tested, a Yashica Electro 35CC is marginally sharper, but it really does not matter. I bought a 43.5mm yellow filter, but for polarizers or other colors, I had to hold 49mm filters manually over the lens. If any of you have any 43.5mm filters you want to sell, please let me know. Thanks for reading.