the only expensive part of the GS-1 system is the 80mm, and thats just some sellers equating scarcity with value. A few months before I bought my GS-1, the 80s were selling for ~$200. One I bought in, someone jacked up their price to $1250, and ever since, ebay sellers have been try getting over a grand (but I've never seen one sell for that much.)
The only two I don’t have are the 80mm and 500mm. No plans to acquire them.
There is about 6 years between the two, so the screen technology probably did not change that much. There is a balance between brightness and focus-snap for manual focus, and that depends a lot on the designers preference at the time. I had the P67, but never tried the P67II, I did not find the older P67 screen any better than the GS1.
Ok, here is my best effort to compare the viewfinders of the Pentax 67II and the Bronica GS-1 with Rick Oleson BrigthScreen MPD screen. Both cameras have their respectively 200 mm lens mounted and closed to f/5.6. The photos were taken with the same camera, lens and exposure (Canon 5D MkII and Canon EF 50 mm f/1.8 MkI; exposure of f/1.8, 1/8 seconds with ISO 1600). The vignetting is caused by the position of the DLSR on the viewfinder, and part but not all of the color balance difference is because I set the Canon white balance to "auto".
Bronica GS-1
View attachment 348382
Pentax 67 II
View attachment 348383
Conclusions:
The central patch of Rick Oleson screen is as bright as the Pentax, it has even better contrast and definition. So my impressions of dim viewfinder on the Bronica are caused by the rest of the screen which is less bright for some reason than Pentax didn't have. I have also noticed than Pentax microprisms are bigger and more obvious than Rick Oleson's which makes for me easier to focus.
Steven, the GS-1 user manual component chart indicates that there are 7 'G' screens - which one are you thinking of? The image below is from the user manual. I assumed that I had the 'Matte' screen, which was quite dull (even after cleaning).@halfaman You may want to try the G-type screen for GS-1. It is a simple matte screen without focusing aids. It is brighter than the screen you have. I actually prefer it to the Oleson and yours for slow and critical focus, like shallow DOF portraits on a tripod.
Is the difference the same with a 100mm/105mm lens at 2.8?Ok, here is my best effort to compare the viewfinders of the Pentax 67II and the Bronica GS-1 with Rick Oleson BrigthScreen MPD screen. Both cameras have their respectively 200 mm lens mounted and closed to f/5.6. The photos were taken with the same camera, lens and exposure (Canon 5D MkII and Canon EF 50 mm f/1.8 MkI; exposure of f/1.8, 1/8 seconds with ISO 1600). The vignetting is caused by the position of the DLSR on the viewfinder, and part but not all of the color balance difference is because I set the Canon white balance to "auto".
<snip>...
Conclusions:
The central patch of Rick Oleson screen is as bright as the Pentax, it has even better contrast and definition. So my impressions of dim viewfinder on the Bronica are caused by the rest of the screen which is less bright for some reason than Pentax didn't have. I have also noticed than Pentax microprisms are bigger and more obvious than Rick Oleson's which makes for me easier to focus.
There's two repair shops in North America that will repair the Pentax 67II, but the repair isn't guaranteed in the sense it can be repaired. They do their best, unless its a circuit board issue needing replacement. The magnets in the shutter on the P67II make it unreliable as well, compared to the version 1. But when I did have the P67II, I loved using it, though my shutter was not reliable. Im back to the version 1.Pentax 67II is nowadays unrepairable and each body cost around $3000. Mine is broken with no Pentax official technical service or independent shop willing to even touch it.
There's two repair shops in North America that will repair the Pentax 67II, but the repair isn't guaranteed in the sense it can be repaired. They do their best, unless its a circuit board issue needing replacement. The magnets in the shutter on the P67II make it unreliable as well, compared to the version 1. But when I did have the P67II, I loved using it, though my shutter was not reliable. Im back to the version 1.
After one year, I am really satisfied with the Bronica GS-1, except for one thing: Film backs. So far I had four 120 film backs. Two of them malfunctioning from day 1 and returned, the third died yesterday after 5 months (frame counter doesn"t work). Only one is sill working. Besides the disturbance and waste of film, each one cost $200-250. It is no peanuts.
Is this just bad luck or it is a known current issue of this system? I am in love with the image quality, to the extent of considering the sell of my whole Pentax 67II gear... if film backs are reliable.
Over a decade in the 1980s-90s, I used Camerawiz (Marshman) to service several Fuji GS645 folders I purchased: bellows replacement, general CLA. He did beautiful work, fairly quickly, and at a fair price. Then one of my GS645 cameras was stolen in a home burglary. When I recovered it nearly a year later, the classic problem presented was a damaged strut mechanism from being forced to close by some idiot. I sent it to Camerawiz for repair. Marshman confirmed that he would have to delay to find a part. Never heard from him or saw the camera again. So unhappily, Marshman is a "do not recommend".I read in threads in this forum that Frank Marshman (aka Camera Wiz) might be a resource, but recent postings by members who used, or tried to use, Mr Marshman were discouraging. ...
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