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Looking for medium format folding rangefinder 6x7, 6x9, or 6x8

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film4Me

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A Fujifilm GF670W would need to be crowdfunder and given to the OP as a birthday present, US$5,000 there abouts. His budget seems to be around 1/10th of that.

Now he's shifted to 6x6, favoring a Mamiya Six folder, and doesn't realize it has a coupled rangefinder. Only needs a clip-on light meter. The Mamiya Six Automat would be a good choice, but it's still 6x6 which means forgetting about the larger formats of 6x7 and 6x9 he previously required.
 

GregY

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...actually neither the Plaubel 67W nor the Fuji 670W...meet the criteria since both lenses are f4.5 ......As mentioned..RL is dreaming....
 

GregY

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Ok I am now looking at Mamiya Six, lets see.

Well the original Mamiya Six has neither a meter nor a wide lens.
Since we're talking 6x6 now.... a new Mamiya 6 with a 50mm lens is easily the match for
Leica lens quality. Handles well and the hard covered bellows retracts unlike the Mamiya 7. As good an MF camera as you could ever ask for.
(Mamiya 6, 50mm, TriX)
IMG_0888.jpg
 

BrianShaw

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The exposure meter is still a problem.

May I ask, why is that? a handheld exposure meter is a bit of necessity for most older MF cameras. Not really difficult to use, either, once familiar with it.
 
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GregY

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Greg: Have you ever used a Bronica RF645? They are interesting cameras to me.

No Craig, they were few & far between. I've never been a fan of 645 (until someone gave me a Pentax 645).....& the Bronica has a vertically oriented viewfinder....which would drive me nuts since i see photos in landscape and rarely shoot portrait orientation...
 
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Craig

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the Bronica has a vertically oriented viewfinder....which would drive me nuts since i see photos in landscape and rarely shoot portrait orientation...
Me too! Part of the reason I have not pulled the trigger on one of the various Fuji 645's either.
 

John Wiegerink

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Well the original Mamiya Six has neither a meter nor a wide lens.
Since we're talking 6x6 now.... a new Mamiya 6 with a 50mm lens is easily the match for
Leica lens quality. Handles well and the hard covered bellows retracts unlike the Mamiya 7. As good an MF camera as you could ever ask for.
(Mamiya 6, 50mm, TriX)View attachment 416991
If I sold off some of my gear or had extra cash on hand I'd be running with a Mamiya 7 three lens or two lens outfit. Probably won't happen since I don't buy lottery tickets. I have often thought about a Fuji GL690, but don't have any experience with the camera or its lenses. I did have a Fuji GW690 for a while and loved its lens, but the older GL lenses I'm not sure about.
 

abruzzi

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The GL690 has great lenses. The have a breech lock mount which takes a little getting used to. The body is about the same size as the later GW cameras but the lenses are larger. The camera has a mechanism to pull a curtain over the film so you can change lenses mid roll. If you were to get one you’ll definitely want to test that first thing. I haven’t found anyone to work on them. I have the 65,100, and 150 which all work fine, but I also have the 180 which need some work so it sits on the shelf for now.

They are not a good replacement for someone looking for a folder. The 6x9 folder can slip into the back pocket of a pair of jeans, but the GL690 is a monster.
 

Prest_400

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@GregY Great shot with the Mamiya 6! That's the kind of run and gun environment where these cameras work best.

If I sold off some of my gear or had extra cash on hand I'd be running with a Mamiya 7 three lens or two lens outfit.
Ditto, and one of the reasons why these cameras are so value... Wish there were new units. GF670W also seems like a winner.
f4.5 isn't that crazy slow given DoF and it's medium format after all.

645 is actually IMO a better format for travel-street given the frames per roll and assume DoF of a shorter FL standard lens.
If shooting happily with a 6x9, that's a lot of reloading. Beautiful large negs though. Reminds me how 220 would be fantastic for those use cases.

The GW690 is a great camera with some quirks. The GL 100mm is a Tessar type but have heard well of it.

It's a pity that there is a tech gap betweem vintage equipment and portable, modern formula lensed cameras with fast features. Then the SLRs or the auto Fujis did bridge the gap
 

abruzzi

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645 is actually IMO a better format for travel-street given the frames per roll and assume DoF of a shorter FL standard lens.
If shooting happily with a 6x9, that's a lot of reloading. Beautiful large negs though. Reminds me how 220 would be fantastic for those use cases.

Along with the Bronica RF, Fuji made a bunch of great portable cameras in 645 format. I have the Zi model with the zoom, and to be honest, it’s never taken a bad shot (to be clear, I have taken many bad shots with it, but they are always perfectly focused and exposed.)

At some point I’d like to try the GS645 if I could find one in good shape-including rangefinder and meter. It’s probably the smaller than the newer ones. I don’t think it’s quite pocketable, though.
 
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