Chris
Funnily enough, I've been doing some Googling this evening and I also found the chimney listed at Camera Museum (
https://www.cameramuseum.uk/product-page/chimney-finder-exc-1). I've made an enquiry as to how much they may offer me that item plus a strap and a quick focus adapter.
I didn't go too much into detail for fear of boring people, but as you've asked for more detail I'll offer it up.
The fact is this: I wanted a blad since I was a kid but I got on the Nikon train until, in 2011, all my Nikon gear was stolen except for one of the two F5's that I had. So I used that opportunity to move to MF and Blad was my first choice. Due to digital and the drop in prices for analogue blads in recentish years, I able to eventually buy one, back in 2012. So I'm not new to Hasselblads as such...I've shot quite a lot through it. For landscapes, it's amazing. See attached landscapes which I took with it.
But the problem is I am a father of two who works a lot and I seldom get out doing landscapes these days. My main photographic interest these days is my family and the odd special event that people ask me to shoot, like family\friend weddings and so forth. The last wedding I did, I used the Blad and my F5. I got some nice shots with the Blad, but many were ruined due to shots that I thought were focussed not being so. Same goes for shots of my kids who even when they stand still about 5 feet in front of me, they look in focus, I shoot at say f8 but the results are not as sharp as I'd expect, so I can forget trying with f2.8! Again, sometimes I get it right (also see the others attached) but for every one that's good, I have 3 or 4 that are ruined. My F5 kind of saved the day at the wedding, as I got a good few dozen extra shots that were well focussed thanks to it's fast AF. That's not how I expected Hasselblad life to be. I was expecting nearly every shot to be bang on.....
I do have a Manfrotto tripod that I use for landscapes, but it's not something I carry around for more candid stuff of the family, but I want to use my Blad for exactly that kind of thing. Lets face it - until the late 1990s, pros were using Blads handheld all the time at model shows and using them for weddings. Surely tripod use isn't essential for Blad use? Or am I expecting too much of the camera?
I just want to be able to use the Blad well and find that most shots I take with it come out bang on, like they do with my F5. I took that on holiday this summer and I shot 5 rolls of Kodak Porta 160 with it. Of those 5 rolls of 36, guess how many I threw away? 6 shots! The rest went in my album. I have nowhere near that level of success with the blad. If I shot 6 rolls of 120, I bet 50% would be garbage. And at the cost of MF film, I can't justify that failure rate.
Perhaps as you state, I need to a few tests to rule out film plane and so on. And if it's not that, then it just must be my inability to use it properly. So the chimney will be my last stitch attempt at success. And if that fails, maybe I will sell and just invest in more lenses for my F5.
The pics below are some of my Blad success stories. I don't have copies of my failures to hand at the moment (I working away from home) but the attached pics show, I think, that the Blad itself is functioning OK.