FS: A Moskva 4 6x9 folding camera, with leather case.
The good: it works, was recently overhauled. Shutter speeds are accurate within reason (top shutter speed is wishful thinking, as usual). Lens is pretty clean (not pristine, but OK). The bellow are sound and light tight. Rangefinder works ok and is calibrated. Red window film advance works as intended.
The bad: well, it's kinda ugly, condition is about a 6 of 10. It looks old (which it is!). Case is in much better condition. If you're expecting results at the same level as a modern camera, you'll be disappointed. The lens is a 110mm f4.5 Tessar-clone, which is coated. It's just plain soft at full aperture. Stopped down it's an OK performer. This is a left-handed camera (shutter release is operated with the left hand). Ergonomics are perhaps the worst I've ever used, but it does produce negatives that are big. I haven't used this for color, so I can't tell you how it handles color - but I'd bet the look is unique. Oh, and tripod sockets are 3/8", not 1/4".
This camera is a clone of the pre-war Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta C. Apparently the Russians carted the entire factory back to the motherland after the war, so the camera probably was produced using the same machining as the Zeiss camera.
Asking $75 + shipping/insurance. Cheap enough to play with, I guess. Thanks.
The good: it works, was recently overhauled. Shutter speeds are accurate within reason (top shutter speed is wishful thinking, as usual). Lens is pretty clean (not pristine, but OK). The bellow are sound and light tight. Rangefinder works ok and is calibrated. Red window film advance works as intended.
The bad: well, it's kinda ugly, condition is about a 6 of 10. It looks old (which it is!). Case is in much better condition. If you're expecting results at the same level as a modern camera, you'll be disappointed. The lens is a 110mm f4.5 Tessar-clone, which is coated. It's just plain soft at full aperture. Stopped down it's an OK performer. This is a left-handed camera (shutter release is operated with the left hand). Ergonomics are perhaps the worst I've ever used, but it does produce negatives that are big. I haven't used this for color, so I can't tell you how it handles color - but I'd bet the look is unique. Oh, and tripod sockets are 3/8", not 1/4".
This camera is a clone of the pre-war Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta C. Apparently the Russians carted the entire factory back to the motherland after the war, so the camera probably was produced using the same machining as the Zeiss camera.
Asking $75 + shipping/insurance. Cheap enough to play with, I guess. Thanks.
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