David B. look here and you will see all the information you need.
http://homepages.ihug.com.au/~razzle/
Tim, I agree with the lens, I have another which is permanently attached to my folded Shen Hao wooden folder. Neat, small and quite cheap. It was experience with my first Fujinon-W f6.3/150, that made my decision of what lens to put on my converted Polaroid camera.
I found out a couple of other things whilst having lunch today. The camera has a hot shoe, with which I connected a small $5.00 Sunpak auto 140 flash. So fill flash for dark subjects, will be very doable.
The lens standard is able to give swing, both ways and be locked, this is something I doubt I'll ever use, but at least it's there when I need it, if I remember I have it that is.
I can use a tripod in both landscape and portrait modes, Dean has manufactured an extended knob for the landscape mode version, whilst the original portrait tripod socket is in the folding lid. On Deans home page main picture, you can see this. Mine is the 900 version which is the brown one on his page. Note the fabricated cable release holder, this is one of Dean's mods. It works perfectly, one holds the camera with the left hand, aided by the camera strap, you push the cable release with your left thumb.
I have included two pictures of my neighbour, who was just leaving for a trip to the shop when I nabbed him. One is a full frame contact print, you may not be able to see this but there is vignetting visible around three sides. This particular shot was an acid test for close focusing, I was about 1.1 metres away, I think the bellows being squashed a bit, may be causing this. It isn't anything I'll be worrying about as I always shoot with a view to print. The fourth side of this sheet (L/H), where there is no vignetting, contains the slight intrusion of the grafmatic film numbering thingy, which on this particular grafmatic, doesn't work, everything else does though and it doesn't leak any light, which is even better.
The second picture is a cropped print of the whole sheet, which I converted to portrait mode. This print was a severe test of my ability to handhold a reasonably heavy camera. It weighs 2.4 kg with a fully loaded grafmatic and a small flash attached, according to the kitchen scales. The fact I was able to get so close, focus on his left cheek outline, trip the shutter and get a quite sharp picture at f8 which is 1/2 a stop from wide open and not really what the lens is designed for, has made me quite enthusiastic about this camera.
The funny thing about this camera, is that I scoured the world looking for a reasonable 4x5 hand held camera, but found possibly the best value for money and quality camera, 45 minutes ride from home.
Mick.