Would you happen to have the date of the issue of the reviews in both magazines?Both Modern and Popular Photography tested the S3 and rated it;s lens as one of the sharpest they had ever tested, in the 70s most lens tests were done with microfish film, it daily use if lens will resolve 200lMM it is as sharp as it needs for bee for Tmax or Delta 100. I use my S2 and 3 with hearing aid batteries.
A friend and I did some side by side tests with various RF's of the day (many years ago). The S3 and the Minolta Hi-Matic E were about the same and the Leica CL (40mm) was right behind with a Canon QL following. I had a couple of Olympus SP's (not compact) and they were a bit disappointing I recall.
Would you happen to have the date of the issue of the reviews in both magazines?
People have a fantasy about putting a camera in their pocket, taking a stroll, maybe even forgetting about it, bringing it to a club or pub, and then happening upon something and snapping a street masterpiece.
It just never ever happens like that.
Going further OT: If you can tolerate the direct flash look then sure. I just can't. At all.Agree with this, these '70s fixed rangefinders are just too big and bulky to forget about in your pocket. I only truly pocketable camera I ever had success with was the Olympus Mju II. I took that camera to pubs and clubs all the time in the 1990s to photograph my friends doing silly things. I've never shot a masterpiece but those photos of my friends in the '90s are still great and we often look over them and laugh at the memories. The last generation before the ubiquitous camera phone. A friend dropped his into a toilet and it was fine and apologies as I've told this story before, but he also passed his BA Photography degree shooting only with the Mju II whilst his colleagues dropped four figure sums on pro Nikon outfits. At the final degree exhibition his shots stood alongside Hasselblad portraits, they were special because the camera truly could be forgotten about in a pocket.
Off topic, sorry!
Thing is, it doesn't really matter if it's that size or the S3 size. They are both too large to put in a pocket or small bag (they come with their own "bag" usually).The Konica Auto S2 was available with a 1.6 lens. That one is an Interesting option, but it is a big and bulky camera.
RG zone focus. Get a laser RF. Not the cheapest one because that is going to have difficulty working outside in daylight.
It will
A. Allow you to do exact measurements in the close range, where exactitude matters.
B. If you play around with it, it will teach you to become far better at judging distances at a glance.
I can judge distances within 5 m with slack of about 10 to 20 cm. Plenty good for most photography and far quicker than any other manually focus method.
Yeah, I know about it and have tried it.That's pretty impressive! A laser rangefinder probably falls outside of my worthwhile expenses at the moment, but in the future it's probably not a bad idea. I've had some luck using this, which was suggested to me by someone on another forum: https://tomchuk.com/rf/
Not necessarily great for shorter distances, but works surprisingly well!
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