Matt5791
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The other irrating thing is that of course the image on the GG is very directional - what I mean is that you can only see a small area of the image on the ground glass at any one time and have to move around a lot to see the edges and corners. Again I guess experience will take care of this.
My lens is a Schneider Super Angulon 120mm f8 and camera Agfa Ansco.
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Roger - what is the difference between the 120 and 121 SA? (apart from 1mm).
The difference is one of vintage rather than focal length. At some point they renamed the 121mm to 120mm, but I don't know of any actual change beyond that name change.
Ohhh... "Angulon," not "Super Angulon." Your problem may well have not been your inability to focus, but rather the 'focus shift' that the Angulon (and Dagor, from which it derived) design suffered from. The trick is to focus wide open and then re-check it after stopping down.
For a bright slightly wide "normal" lens try a Wollensak 190 f/4.5. Cheap to buy. It's more of a 4x5 lens so watch out for coverage. The Wolly, like a lot of lenses, throw a lot more light than they have sharp coverage. Is the out of focus area in your prints all in the corners? You may be running past the coverage of the lens. Also using tilt to get greater depth of field can be a problem if there is, say a tree, in the middle ground. The bottom will be sharp but the top will be out of focus. Pick up a Kodak professional photoguide. The depth of field scale will help you out.
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