My A-70 backs hold up to about 65-70 frames, vs. the A-24, vs A-16 (4x4), vs. A-12, plus the cut film holder in their little inserts.
Plus the polaroid and Instax instant film backs and the (cursed) digitals.
There may be even a tiny negative or paper printer one day, invented by other Hasselblad owners.
My backs are in sync, all have original inserts and I have spare, new dark slides, In case I forget to insert the dark slide into the holder on the back and loose one, though I am entirely capable to make new brass, bronze, etc dark slides on my own.
Lens quality of Zeiss glass and leaf shuttered lenses are very much the apex optical glass, in medium format, and continue to be the prize in pursuit by other analog lens makers, plus the "V" lenses shutters are repairable by the owner, if they dare to learn how and do it themselves.
These lenses, up to the 350 and 500mm (plus teleconverter, if you roll that way) give you reach beyond any TLR I know of, but, rare, bespoken tech may exist somewhere but no in competition to with these lenses.
Ask folks here to post shots from their 180mm lenses or macro from the 135mm or 120mm lenses on bellows do you can see but a sample of why The Hasselblad 500 series, the Flex and arc bodies, etc, when the shooter is in the mood or need, are worth their weight in the Studio and, the field.
As I said before show us a camera that matches the Hasselblad 500 system, in a very wide selection of abilities, if you can.
We'll be waiting...
Cheers
There is a quote function you know Eli.
Look…
I’m not saying the Hasselblad system is bad, or even that I wouldn’t like to own one with an assortment of lenses, given the chance.
Problem is, all of the time when I see a Hasselblad in the wild, and talk with owners it’s with the standard 80mm/f2.8.
A lens that is terrific but not leaps and bounds above the competition and is even outdone by a few other 6x6 normal lenses.
If they own other lenses it’s very rare that they actually use them.
The second you get into other focal lengths, problems arise.
The wides has the typical problems of wides on an SLR with added tele optics to focus beyond the mirror, with all the problems of optical degradation, loss of speed, weight and size. Only scaled up.
Hasselblad even made a body that addressed that particular problem. In which case the advantages of the system starts to thin out, if you need whole different bodies.
That leaves long lenses. The portrait/medium long lenses are superb, I’ll give you that.
But they are also insanely expensive and/or slow and takes the camera from moderately luggable to a chore and a liability.
And you can in fact make portraits just fine with an 80mm lens.
You can even crop to gain some tele effect, without getting into 135 grain territory.
The longer long lenses are just ridiculous.
Apart from being so expensive that you could buy a superb ED APO short refractor telescope for the price, still have money left over and get better results, they are also so heavy that you will have to carry a tripod.
And to get the sharpness worthy of the format too, you have to stop down so much with EI 100 rated film that you are into dangerously low speeds.
Again, good ideas don’t often scale.
So in short, these lenses are just not practical.
People like the idea of them more, than they actually own and use them.
If you look at studio use mainly, there is the Mamiya RB series that is at least as good with much more bang for the buck, but a lot bigger and heavier. But that’s OK because they were mainly meant for tripod use and in a studio.