T42
Member
A few more thoughts...
Hello Forum.
I should have mentioned my impressions of the Kiev 4a in the previous post.
I think it is a very solid, funky, "fun to use occasionally" camera. It takes great pictures with the Jupiter 8M Sonnar copy lens. Rick Oleson says that a good sample will last indefinitely long. The only thing that goes wrong with a good working sample is the need of new ribbons every 10 or more years in normal use.
Its limitations are several, but for the price I can take them:
1. That wee little peephole excuse for a viewfinder is one.
2. The "Contax Hold" that one needs to master in order to keep from blocking the rangefinder window.
3. The finish is a bit rough. The chrome is flaking off my lens.
4. The film spacing is uneven, but at least it does not overlap in my sample.
5. I had to make my own film spool. No big deal.
6. Adjusting the shutter speeds is a bit goofy.
7. I wish the lens would not latch at infinity. That was evidently a desirable feature long ago.
Here are some things I like about the Kiev 4a:
1. Mass. It is stable in hand holding.
2. I like the funky "sneezing" sound of the shutter at slower speeds. And the "thunk" of higher ones.
3. The Jupiter 8M 50mm f/2 Sonnar copy lens.
4. Lens interchangeability.
5. Availability of affordable FSU optics.
6. The trick "Time" feature. Set camera on bulb, press shutter release and rotate it with your finger 90 degrees. It will latch on. Later, when you want the shutter to close, rotate the shutter button back 90 degrees and it will close. Cool.
7. No batteries, no menus, no software surprises, no electronics surprises.
8. Long baseline rangefinder. Very accurate.
9. I like the fingerwheel for fine focusing.
10. The support sites, like Rick Oleson's have helped me keep it going, even after breaking a ribbon in 2002.
11. Cheap. It was dirt cheap. For ten cents on the dollar, it takes images that most folks cannot tell that they were not taken with my Leica M3.
12. I can take it anywhere, and can use it in almost any light.
13. History and Contax heritage. This camera is essentially a German 1936 design, captured by the Russians, and renamed, built, and "refined" in the Ukraine.
14. I just like it. So I shoot with it occasionally.
I can imagine that with this camera one can experience imaging as it must have been for a serious amateur photographer hiking about in Bavaria just before World War II.
Happy day.
Hello Forum.
I should have mentioned my impressions of the Kiev 4a in the previous post.
I think it is a very solid, funky, "fun to use occasionally" camera. It takes great pictures with the Jupiter 8M Sonnar copy lens. Rick Oleson says that a good sample will last indefinitely long. The only thing that goes wrong with a good working sample is the need of new ribbons every 10 or more years in normal use.
Its limitations are several, but for the price I can take them:
1. That wee little peephole excuse for a viewfinder is one.
2. The "Contax Hold" that one needs to master in order to keep from blocking the rangefinder window.
3. The finish is a bit rough. The chrome is flaking off my lens.
4. The film spacing is uneven, but at least it does not overlap in my sample.
5. I had to make my own film spool. No big deal.
6. Adjusting the shutter speeds is a bit goofy.
7. I wish the lens would not latch at infinity. That was evidently a desirable feature long ago.
Here are some things I like about the Kiev 4a:
1. Mass. It is stable in hand holding.
2. I like the funky "sneezing" sound of the shutter at slower speeds. And the "thunk" of higher ones.
3. The Jupiter 8M 50mm f/2 Sonnar copy lens.
4. Lens interchangeability.
5. Availability of affordable FSU optics.
6. The trick "Time" feature. Set camera on bulb, press shutter release and rotate it with your finger 90 degrees. It will latch on. Later, when you want the shutter to close, rotate the shutter button back 90 degrees and it will close. Cool.
7. No batteries, no menus, no software surprises, no electronics surprises.
8. Long baseline rangefinder. Very accurate.
9. I like the fingerwheel for fine focusing.
10. The support sites, like Rick Oleson's have helped me keep it going, even after breaking a ribbon in 2002.
11. Cheap. It was dirt cheap. For ten cents on the dollar, it takes images that most folks cannot tell that they were not taken with my Leica M3.
12. I can take it anywhere, and can use it in almost any light.
13. History and Contax heritage. This camera is essentially a German 1936 design, captured by the Russians, and renamed, built, and "refined" in the Ukraine.
14. I just like it. So I shoot with it occasionally.
I can imagine that with this camera one can experience imaging as it must have been for a serious amateur photographer hiking about in Bavaria just before World War II.
Happy day.
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