First of all, I got my Autocord last year from Karl Bryan. I'd like to get a lens cap and, while I understand that it takes Rollei Bay 1 accessories, I'm at a loss for a good aftermarket lens cap. Do any of you have specific recommendations?
The plastic screens from China are usually too small. They don't do a good job of accounting for material shrinkage in injection molding. Look for a Rollei metal lens cap on Ebay. Or plastic Rollei-I have a couple questions:
First of all, I got my Autocord last year from Karl Bryan. I'd like to get a lens cap and, while I understand that it takes Rollei Bay 1 accessories, I'm at a loss for a good aftermarket lens cap. Do any of you have specific recommendations?
Secondly, I've shot two rolls so far and, despite taking great care in focusing and using the magnifier each time, most of my shots were either out of focus, blurry from camera shake or both. I think I'd like to get a different focus screen, as I find the stock screen a bit difficult to see in low light. Bryan says that the stock screen is the best but I'd still like to try a different one. What do you think of the Oleson screens? Do you recommend a microprism or matte?
Thanks for the tip, Daniel. I just now ordered one of the plastic caps.The plastic screens from China are usually too small. They don't do a good job of accounting for material shrinkage in injection molding. Look for a Rollei metal lens cap on Ebay. Or plastic Rollei-
Rollei Bay I Plastic Push-On Lens Cap | eBay
Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Rollei Bay I Plastic Push-On Lens Cap at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products!www.ebay.comI have some original Autocord metal caps in very good shape. DM. $45FORSTER UK / US TLR Lens Cap Rolleiflex Rolleicord Yashica Rollei Autocord Bay 1 | eBay
This cap will work on all Rolleiflexes that have Bayonet-I mounts on both the lenses. It is also known as B-30 cap.www.ebay.com
Doing some testing on a tripod is the obvious thing I should do before spending money on more stuff. So of course I didn't think of it!On the screen, I would determine why you are not getting focused images. Do some tripod shots, or table at least. Shoot something at 45 degrees and note where you focused. The Oleson screen will introduce a new element as it is slightly thicker than the Autocord glass so it will need a little shimming. Solve the first problem before adding a new one on top.
Or get the Oleson and figure it all out at once with the final package?
TLRs can be tricky because the camera is floating in space more than most cameras like a 35mm held to the face. One thing to watch for is swaying and moving the camera after focusing and while doing final framing.
First, practice with the viewfinder. When sitting around, just play with it. Get used to the reversal, get used to framing, moving, etc. There comes a point where the confusion disappears but it takes some time and practice. The disorientation of the reversal will throw you off-balance. Practice, and practice.Do y'all brace the camera against your chest or just hold it freely in the hand? Or use a tripod or what?
First, practice with the viewfinder. When sitting around, just play with it. Get used to the reversal, get used to framing, moving, etc. There comes a point where the confusion disappears but it takes some time and practice. The disorientation of the reversal will throw you off-balance. Practice, and practice.
Holding is personal. For an Autocord, I cradle the bottom in my left hand and use my left index finger for moving the focus lever. I have my right hand with the thumb on the back and the index finger on the body edge front, my basic right hand grip. I fire the shutter with my middle finger, using the pad and first joing, not the tip. Many people use a strap as a stabilizer but I don't use a strap so I don't know their tricks. I like a soft release but it needs to be small to fit. The convex one here is small enough-
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Remember that it needs to be 10mm in diameter. Larger will hit the edge of the lens shroud. I'm not certain if the 11mm concave one in the link I provided will fit. I prefer the convex, rolled up top, over the sinking concave, but that's me.The soft release sounds like a great idea! I know a lot of people use them on Fuji X cameras because most of them have shutter buttons threaded for a cable release but I never tried one with my X-Pros.
Do you use the magnifier on your Autocord often? If I fouled up the focus on so many shots I made with the magnifier, I shudder to think about what my accuracy would be not using it. But I'm surprised to hear people talk about focusing without one. I don't have perfect vision but I have reliably good vision and it's still unthinkable to me!
THIS is really good advice and might be just what I need to keep my expectations in check. I'd never used ground glass focusing before and was hoping that, with a larger format (the largest format I'd used heretofore was 645), I would get the kind of snap in the viewfinder that I get with my Bronica ETRS, but moreso.You get used to looking for 'least blurry' focus, not sharpest?
Thanks for the tip, Daniel. I just now ordered one of the plastic caps.
Doing some testing on a tripod is the obvious thing I should do before spending money on more stuff. So of course I didn't think of it!
Holding the camera straight has proven surprisingly difficult. Getting used to a WLF, I expected yaw to take some getting used to when moving the camera to compose a shot, but it hasn't been too big a problem. Roll has been the tricky axis! Additionally, I believe that depressing the shutter in those first two rolls introduced some motion blur on the yaw axis. After getting it back from Karl for a frame spacing issue, I've been practicing dry firing it to try and get a steady squeeze technique. But as you say, not being able to brace the camera against my face adds an extra challenge. Do y'all brace the camera against your chest or just hold it freely in the hand? Or use a tripod or what?
I'm pretty sure Minolta had a bulb fan flash made for the autocorrect camera. Most camera makers at that time had or offed one. I don't know if Minolta ever made a dedicated electronic flash for the autocorrect or not, but I doubt it.I've noticed that on about 2/3 of my Autocords, the cold shoe is mounted so that the stopping pin is positioned toward the rear of the camera, thus the flash can only be mounted from the front, but will be facing the wrong direction. Of course these cold shoes can be turned around by removing the four little screws. But in the position with the stopping pin towards the rear, I have no flash that can be mounted without being pointed in the wrong direction. Which got me to wondering... was there a flash that came with Autocords that had to be inserted from the front, but still face forward?
I have no flash that can be mounted without being pointed in the wrong direction.
Except some electronic flashes only go in one way.It's a cold shoe with no electrical connections, and it's symmetrical other than the pin, so does it matter if the pin stops it going too far back rather than too far forewords?
Except some electronic flashes only go in one way.
Except some electronic flashes only go in one way.
So unscrew it and turn it around.
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