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weasel

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Joined
Nov 25, 2006
Messages
171
Format
Medium Format
I have recently been shooting both a pentax 67, and a 645. Both have great lenses, and in this day and age are cheap.
I had never used 6x4.5 before, but am really enjoying it. The pentax 645 is not much bigger than lots of 35 slrs, or big dslrs, and I find it very easy to use. One big plus for my bifocal eyes is that it is one of the few cameras I own that I can see the entire viewfinder with. I have a 50 and 150 for it, and it makes a nice package to carry around and shoot much like one would a 35. The meter is accurate, has several modes. It is a really nice machine.
The 67 is a much bigger brute, but that goes with the territory of the bigger neg. The lenses are outstanding, and cheap. Really no big negatives to the camera that I can find, as long as you don't need interchangable backs, and can live with slower synch speeds (unless you buy a leaf shutter lens.)
MF has gotten so cheap these days, it is pretty much a matter of preference. My only advice would be to watch out for stuff that has been worked to death in a studio somewhere.
 

dynachrome

Member
Joined
Sep 16, 2006
Messages
1,758
Format
35mm
You can do very nice work with an inexensive TLR but the slow pace might be frustrating. For not too much money I would recommend a Bronica SQ-A with a waist level finder, an 80/2.8 lens and a 120 back. A nice strap should be available from Tamron, KOH's, KEH or someone on eBay. You will need a separate meter with this set-up.
 

makan

Member
Joined
May 21, 2008
Messages
32
Format
Medium Format
To get the taste of something special try the old Mamiya Universal with a 50mm lens and a 6x9 film format. Then you get really hooked on the MF.
 

TimVance

Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2007
Messages
17
Location
Florida
Format
Medium Format
If you want quality and don't want to spend alot of money buy a yashica 124g. keh.com.
 

Glenn M

Member
Joined
Jan 23, 2008
Messages
29
Location
Southlake, T
Format
4x5 Format
It was asked: "How do RB67 lenses rate, good one's bad one's?"

Any of their Sekor C lenses, and especially the K/L lenses, are superb... I don't believe any of them are bad. Another commented they didn't like the 50mm... but personally it's one of my favorite lenses. It is a little bit more unforgiving than the 65mm and takes some forethought to use it due to the ultra-wideness of its images, but it's tack-sharp as most of Mamiya's stable of lenses. By the way, my favorite of all their lenses is their 75mm f4.5 K/L Tilt/Shift lens. It's big, it's heavy, it operates differently than their others (lens has a separate mechanism for cocking the shutter unlike all their others), but the length is moderately wide, it's arguably the sharpest lens they make, and the tilt/shift function enables one to correct perspective similar to large format cameras.

On Mamiya lenses, I'd be sure to buy only lenses rated VERY high (Excellent++ or Mint), as there are lots of older ones that have been abused and/or used very hard. I also would only buy Sekor C or K/L variants, and not the older uncoated Sekors.
 

Soeren

Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2004
Messages
2,675
Location
Naestved, DK
Format
Multi Format
What? What did I say?

Well nothing really but A: recommend P6X7 B: mention mirror induced vibration C:says No problem and D: go on with shutter induced B:says...? C: denies.... etc.
Not your fault. :smile:
Kind regards
 
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