DrPablo
Member
Has anyone tried the Horsley rotational cameras, or have a sense of how they compare to the Noblex?
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The Noblex looks truly amazing. I wish I could find one inexpensively.
I'd much prefer one that takes 120 film.
It's no rush for me -- I can save my pennies for a while.
That rotational camera I've linked is actually considerably less expensive than a Noblex, but I think it has a fixed 1/60 shutter speed.
I think it's unique cameras like this that (in part) keep film alive. There's just no digital answer for a swing lens camera -- it's not that it can't be made, it's just that no one will ever make it.
As full rotational digital cameras are on the market your argument seems week to me.
Going on my experience with a friend and the aforementioned rotating camera, try a faster rotation and a bigger slit opening for less banding. If you can of course!
There are swing lens digital cameras? That's what I meant.
The full rotational ones don't have nearly the flexibility and features of the SLRs. More effort has been put into tripod heads and stitching programs than actual cameras.
Roger,
There was a misunderstanding; I meant digital rotational cameras.
ben-s,
How do you steer the rewind or wind motor. Are they originally stepper motors too, or is a potentiometer sufficient?
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