darkroommike
Subscriber
Kodak Signet 35, it was good enough for the government.
I’m using one right now that spent a vacation at Chris’ Retina spa. I was shocked to see that the sticker says “December 2018” and this was my first opportunity to use it.The very fact the Chris can repair these makes the Kodak Retina line a good option in my mind.
Surprising that no one recommends a Retina Reflex, never used one, the later Reflex 4 had a nice range of lens, 28 to 200, some could couple with the rangelfinder on the S rangelfinder.
I have a spare of that tooIf you find a working model of one of these, it will cement your "steam punk" cred, and be available as a weapon in case of attack!
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I had one of these - it was my first 35mm camera. It was given to me by my Dad, and most likely came from the camera repair department at the Kodak lab where my Dad worked. It might have been a customer camera that was abandoned by a customer - that did happen - and I believe items like that were made available for purchase by employees.
It was even more solid and heavy that it looks!
If you want an inexpensive Kodak 35mm there is always the Kodak Pony I35.
The 524,00 figure comes from a couple of sources that I think copied each other, but it is off by roughly a factor of 10 according to Dr Jentz.
The Retina Reflexes were a series of 35mm SLR's with interchangeable lenses and one oddball, the Instamatic Reflex, that used the same lenses but had a drop in 126 cartridge. The lenses were Schneiders and Rodenstocks. Not too bad.That’s because it’s a 126 camera.
No numbers but Helios on Helios and Xenon on Xenon is the only thing to be aware of, AFAIK.Not wanting to hijack the thread, but since we are discussing Retinas here, I have a question.
I've been debating getting a IIc or IIIc myself, and I am aware that the serial number of the 50mm front element should match the shutter body. My question is whether the accessory lens elements should also match? Were they paired at the factory or should any 80mm or 35mm front element work on the body?
The accessory lenses do not have a matching number criteria.Not wanting to hijack the thread, but since we are discussing Retinas here, I have a question.
I've been debating getting a IIc or IIIc myself, and I am aware that the serial number of the 50mm front element should match the shutter body. My question is whether the accessory lens elements should also match? Were they paired at the factory or should any 80mm or 35mm front element work on the body?
I find both auxiliaries easy to use with the dual finder. Transferring the focus takes a few seconds, but it's actually pretty easy when you get used to it. I mostly zone focus with the 35 anyway. Beautifully finished cameras that are a joy to use.The little c Retina IIIc is IMO the one to go for. I have both:
- It’s far easier/cheaper to clean and repair the top finder part of the little c.
I’d take a smaller clean finder over a slightly murky bigger one any day.
If you wanted a huge finder get one of the other great rangefinders. That’s not what the Retina IIIc is about, though it’s still far better than cruel jokes like the Olympus XA finder.
The big Cs finder isn’t that big either.
And there are permanent distracting extra lines in it, whether you are using them or not.
Rangefinder patch size and therefore potential precision is about the same.
- The auxiliary lenses is a nice gimmick (they work for both c and C it should added). But unless you are really dedicated it is far, far easier to just have an SLR with the appropriate lenses on the side.
They are fiddly to change and store, esp. the standard front element.If you insist on the auxiliary lenses I would personally prefer the separate big nice finder in the hot shoe, instead of the overpopulated big C finder.
They are slow as molasses, so forget about bokeh. And plan for the light situation.
They are not impossible to focus, but it feels like taking off with a plane. You need to check all the flaps twice. Not a spontanious thing.
They are not optically optimal compared to full lenses.
The small c also has less chance of the previous owners having use the aux lenses (they weren’t constantly made aware of their existence and they were a bit harder to use) and therefore compromised the first cell and the inner surfaces.
- The little c is far cheaper and more numerous. Making the chance of getting a good one higher.
You also definitely want the Helios lens if at all possible. It is subtly but markedly sharper AFAIKS. Again, going for the little c will make that easier.
- I don’t know this for certain. But due to the little c having a permanent shield over the light meter, there aught to be a better chance of it working to spec.
I have never held a Retina where the meter didn’t work though, which is quite surprising considering how often they croak on other cameras.
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