Kaplan… what a great memory! RIP, Al.
Another similar suggestion I saw in another forum’s discussion on a semi-related topic:
Leave 'em about two stops down from fully open, and with the focus set at a reasonable hyperfocal distance. That way, when you forget about them for 30 years and the basement floods and the lenses seize up from rust and corrosion, they are the most usable in their damaged state.![]()
That certainly works, but wastes having a fast lens. Instead, use a camera with a slower lens -- one that doesn't even have a rangefinder. There are a ton of them -- very small and light -- with fixed lenses. No need to focus at all.
But comparing a Kodak f9 or Kodak M35 to a Minolta 7SII or Olympus RD35, for example, is pretty meaningless. They all work great for what they do, but they are apples vs oranges.
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