MF RF with WA?

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Frank Miller

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Hi!

I would like to supplement my Rolleiflex with a wide-angle medium format camera for daylight flash photography.

I was looking at a Koni-Omega with a 180 and a 58mm lens. I used the 58 in the distant past and LOVED it. The camera it attaches to... Well, it's not bad at all, but I remember it as more 'newfanlged contraption' than 'precision instrument'...

I'm broke, so I was offering in trade a Mamiya 645 with a 55 and a prism, winder, 120 & 220 inserts... but (sniff) the deal fell through.

Given that this is all of my allowance I can spend right now - could any of you recommend another option? Or is the K/O my best bet? The Fuji 'Texas Leica' cameras look great, but probably out of my range...

Please don't even mention Plaubel Makinas or Rolleiwides or I'll start to cry....
 

Sirius Glass

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I had the Mamiya C330 with a porroflex prism. The light meter had long since stopped working. While the 65mm wide angle lenses, I felt, was too close to the 80mm lens. The 55mm lens is a much better choice for a wide angle lens with the 80mm lens. Plus the Mamiya Cxxx allows on to change lenses.
 
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Frank Miller

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That's definitely a good option. I've had a couple of C3's in the past and they were nice. And if you got tired of taking photos you could always use it to anchor dirigibles.

I've heard the C330 is lighter....
 

Devin@RFCo

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Mamiya Press? with 65mm and a 6x9 back. Cheap, cheap, and cheap.

Was looking around for something similar myself but ended up with a Super Fujica-6 well under my budget.
 

DREW WILEY

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You can get Fuji SW rangefinders with a fixed 65mm lens in three different formats: 6x7, 6x8, and 6x9. The older versions tend to be very reasonably priced.
 

Kino

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Kiev 60 with a MIR-26B, 45mm f3.5 lens can be had for around $250/275...
 

GRHazelton

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Pentax 645n with 35mm lens. The body is pretty cheap,the lens is stellar, but since it also fits the 645 digital bodies the price has gone up, especially the AF models. The 645n is easy to focus with focus confirmation. I've never missed AF.
 

Pioneer

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Along with the Kiev 60 the Pentacon TL6 is a wonderful camera with a few idiosyncrasies. The lenses are magnificent
The Pentax 645 series is also wonderful and though the first in the group does not have autofocus the viewfinder is wonderful and makes manual focus sooo easy. The Pentax 645 is usually pretty inexpensive and the lenses are not bad. In fact, along with the SMC A 35, the SMC A 45-85 f/4.5 is a real jewel as well.
Lots of options.
 

Paul Howell

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Mamiya Press? with 65mm and a 6x9 back. Cheap, cheap, and cheap.

+1 for the Press line, I have a Universal and both the 55 and 65mm, only negative is that you need the finder as well. The KoniOmega is a very good camera with a great lens, but the push pull film advance levers are likely to show signs of wear. As mentioned Kiev 60 if it has been rebuilt. Last Crown or Speed 2X3 with wide angle lens, if you use the ground glass for focusing as there is no cam for a wide angle. These all have leaf shutters with flash syn at all speeds, well a speed version will have both a leaf shutter in the lens as well as a focal plane shutter.
 
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Frank Miller

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Thanks for all of your responses!

I hadn't thought of the Kiev's, I will definitely look into that.
 

spijker

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If money is an issue, why not get a 80mm lens for the Mamiya 645 instead. Leave the winder and Rolleiflex at home and you'll have a compact kit with normal and a wide(-ish) angle lens. Probably lighter and smaller than the 'flex plus an additional MF RF. And on days that you want the smallest/lightest option or want the Rolleiflex experience, you just bring the Rolleiflex and leave the rest at home.

KEH and ebay have some 80mm lenses listed. The ugly N on KEH might be worth a try. Too ugly? You return it and get your money back, no risk. Or the 70mm with a leaf shutter (KEH) for your daylight flash photography.
 
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Frank Miller

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I actually do have an 80 (the 1.9 - which is awesome).

I'm interested in shooting flash outdoors though, and the Mamiya 645s sync at 1/60...

It's starting to look like my best bang for the buck is likely going to be a Mamiya C220 with a 55...

Thanks!
 

MattKing

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spijker

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Just an afterthought; if the goal is daylight flash photography, I assume that you want the leaf shutter to shoot at a wide aperture and a high(er) shutter speed to balance daylight and flash. Then the cheapest option is to get a 4x ND filter. That enables you to shoot at an equivalent of 1/250 s and F/2.8 with the Mamiya. The downside is a darker viewfinder to focus. But in daylight a 4x ND isn't too bad. It's like using a polarizer or a medium orange filter.
 

Sirius Glass

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I had the Mamiya C330 with a porroflex prism. The light meter had long since stopped working. While the 65mm wide angle lenses, I felt, was too close to the 80mm lens. The 55mm lens is a much better choice for a wide angle lens with the 80mm lens. Plus the Mamiya Cxxx allows on to change lenses.

That's definitely a good option. I've had a couple of C3's in the past and they were nice. And if you got tired of taking photos you could always use it to anchor dirigibles.

I've heard the C330 is lighter....

And that is why I traded in my C330 for a Hasselblad and never looked bad, but that is OT. My Bad :whistling:
 

fmiller4

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A 55 with a leaf-shutter lens?

You, good sir/madam, have just become the champion of the internet!

I didn’t know there was such a thing or that it would be reasonably priced.

That is the easiest and ultimately cheapest solution.

Thanks!
 

spijker

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Glad I could help. Looks like you bought it. There's also the 80mm F/2.8 N/L and 150mm F/3.8 N/L lenses with leaf shutters for the Mamiya 645 cameras (in case the finances get better). See attached pics.

Mamiya 645 Pro leaf shutter lenses.jpg Mamiya 645 Pro lens lineup.jpg

Enjoy the new lens!
Menno
(male)

edit: found this instruction manual.
 
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