summicron1
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what was the name of that wizz-bang 4 by 5 lightweight camera, the one you supplied the lens/shutter for?
Took a cupla years longer than expected and left the makers hating life, hating kickstarter, hating their customers and themselves and the world in general and vowing never to have anything to do with the whole idea ever again?
Travelwide Wanderlust camera. I remember how late to deliver and overworked they were. So much so, they delivered all the cameras they had promised to deliver and walked away from it. They promised to bring it to retail, but never did...
https://wanderlustcameras.com/
Probably doable from a technical point of view, but certainly not for a resale price of $300 (or whatever their target is).interchangable lens mount plate AND film back? Good luck with focus and registration issues with all those tolerances.
Probably doable from a technical point of view, but certainly not for a resale price of $300 (or whatever their target is).
... they have to work backwards from fully auto everything to fully manual - manual cameras are very hard especially when you are used to cameras doing everything for you.
Still, this indicates a max bill of material and manufacturing costs of max $200. In my opinion, the target cost vs target spec/features is probably too aggressive to make a high quality product. I hope I will be proven wrong.It was £350 for the beta camera and £399 for the "retail". Which around $500
There was an older guy at work once, mid 60's, who used a D800. Every week he'd tell me of a new "discovery" he had found on some website, such as setting a manual lens for hyperfocal distance. At one point I brought in an old photo magazine from the 1950's to show him all his discoveries were just basic photographic principles.
By age eleven I knew how to set aperture, shutter speed, and focus settings properly. I tell people that, aside from composition, those settings are all there is to play with. All the "modes" on their camera just adjust those parameters.
I really wish this Reflex camera were totally mechanical. I don't like the idea of non-replaceable batteries.
Probably doable from a technical point of view, but certainly not for a resale price of $300 (or whatever their target is).
Of course when the lens is stopped down you cannot focus because there is not enough light, and it seems the inverted DOF preview button is on the left side so a follow-up question from Mistral75 is how you can open up your aperture and at the same time focus your lens.
A 1/4000 top speed on an M42 SLR is something which I believe is unprecedented. I recall some Fujicas (ST801) hitting a 1/2000 speed, so this is a neat feature for those with M42 lenses that they want to shoot wide open.
.....
EDIT: They've just replied to a comment on their Kickstarter saying the photos are from an early iteration and the final model will have the DOF button on the right.....
The removable film back is an interesting concept. Being able to remove the film back mid roll and swapping out for a second film back with another type of film in it could be useful. Frankly though, I have enough film slr's. Can't see me backing this one even if the concept behind it is intriguing.
+1I smell a digital back at some point in the future if they can really pull off this thing.
Exactly.Pointing out its conceptual or practical shortcomings shouldn't be interpreted as being a killjoy and spoilsport.
Even better, spend it on photo paper!Modular 35mm cameras don't have a convincing history, from the Contarex to the Rollei.
The future of analogue is better assured by spending £350 on film.
That was my first thought.There is no way anyone will see a working production quality camera from this effort. Not unless they add at least two zeroes to the KickStarter goal.
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