xya
Member
No, there is no slightly curved film plane. I cannot confirm this https://www.120folder.com/agfa_record_III.htm
No, there is no slightly curved film plane. I cannot confirm this https://www.120folder.com/agfa_record_III.htm
I have a Perkeo II and it's marvellous https://www.120folder.com/voigtlaender_perkeo_II.htm and I don't agree with the Skopar being a bad lens...
Like anything else, one can always find an example to agree with one's beliefs. But anytime something is cherry-picked like that, it ignores the elephant in the room - in this case the fact that skill and technique are far more important than this lens or that lens.
That Skopar was probably fiddled with - maybe one of the elements was installed backwards.
Now I need a Perkeo just to prove you all wrong
I have both a Bessa I and II with the color skopars.
Here is one from the Bessa I. I have been very pleased with the performance of the Color Skopar. Perhaps at closer ranges, the front-element focussing causes poor performance?
No, there is no slightly curved film plane. I cannot confirm this https://www.120folder.com/agfa_record_III.htm
The second photo is like a classic "When you see it..." meme.These cameras vary with age and condition. My wife Melanie shot some of her best early work with a Record III — had a show in LA with that series (samples attached), and won a prize from Ilford for it. Fantastic camera — she could handhold it for one-second exposures and get razor-sharp images from corner to corner. Then she left it on the roof of her car, drove off, busted it, got another and it was mediocre in all respects.
Now I need a Perkeo just to prove you all wrong
I have both a Bessa I and II with the color skopars.
Here is one from the Bessa I. I have been very pleased with the performance of the Color Skopar. Perhaps at closer ranges, the front-element focussing causes poor performance?
So, your perspective is that "there is no such thing as a poor lens"??
in the grand scheme of things it's usually operator error that makes a bigger difference.
There can be poor examples of any lens, but that doesn't prove anything. A sample of one doesn't prove anything other than an isolated manufacturing defect or poor service. Yes, some lenses are better than others, but in the grand scheme of things it's usually operator error that makes a bigger difference.
.... I found that even primitive lenses like triplets and rapid rectilinears rendered surprisingly modern images. You have to go back to meniscus lenses to start to get visibly different looks. ...
There can be poor examples of any lens, but that doesn't prove anything. A sample of one doesn't prove anything other than an isolated manufacturing defect or poor service. Yes, some lenses are better than others, but in the grand scheme of things it's usually operator error that makes a bigger difference.
I only read the first 4 pages. Is anyone using a Voightlander Perkeo? I had ordered one about 6 years ago, but porch pirates got it. I've been wondering if I was missing out ever since.
That's pretty simple, put a ruler on the frame and see if it lies flat. As I understand it, there is the frame and a pressure plate pressing the film onto the frame. For a curved film plane frame and pressure plate are curved. This is not the case, the pressure plate is perfectly flat.How do you test this?
Tensioning of the film in folders is primitive and complex at the same time.
It’s roll to roll, but there is the interface between the rollers and the pressure plate in the film gate.
And then there is friction with the spools agains the spool holders, which is sometimes lacking with Fuji, Lomo and Foma film, resulting in the dreaded “soft” roll with edge light leaks.
All evidence points to folders using films curvature as a spring to keep it flat enough, to a larger degree than for example a TLR. Resulting in a slightly curved plane, especially with 6x9.
With a folder, the lens is being moved into and out of the light path. The struts are susceptible to damage that likely moves the lens out of its intended place. With a regular camera, it is much harder to misalign the lens to the focal plane.
I think folders, especially 6x9, are more prone to shake and vibration from the shutter mechanism itself.
I had a pre-war Bessa 1 and I simply found it hard to handhold. It's a fairly light camera to begin with and with the shutter release on the (for me) awkward left side *and* on the door, I felt like I was always pulling the camera down and to the left when taking a shot.
I think folders, especially 6x9, are more prone to shake and vibration from the shutter mechanism itself.
I had a pre-war Bessa 1 and I simply found it hard to handhold. It's a fairly light camera to begin with and with the shutter release on the (for me) awkward left side *and* on the door, I felt like I was always pulling the camera down and to the left when taking a shot.
All evidence points to folders using films curvature as a spring to keep it flat enough, to a larger degree than for example a TLR. Resulting in a slightly curved plane, especially with 6x9.
I once cut my finger on a Seagull 120 folder, the edge of the door was very sharp!![]()
The Agfa 6x9s do not present this problem -- their shutter release button is on the top plate. I photographed Melanie once when she was shooting a long exposure at the end of the day. That woman is a human tripod.
I don't think cock-and-release shutters give me any worry about shaking the camera, unless as you say the release is badly located. Everset shutters, where you tension the shutter as you press the release, are intrinsically prone to shaking as the mech finally gives way and the shutter fires.
I don't think you understand what I said. One example doesn't prove a trend. A sample of one does not prove anything.What it does tell us, though, is that if someone buys one of these old folders and after rigorous, careful testing* it gives poor results, there's a good possibility that they have a bad example of that lens and need not blame themselves for the poor results. It's unhelpful to suggest that there is no such thing as a bad example of any particular lens, and that poor results are always the result of "user error".
*put the camera on a tripod, use a cable release, and stop down to a middle aperture. Use a slower film.
With a folder, the lens is being moved into and out of the light path. The struts are susceptible to damage that likely moves the lens out of its intended place. With a regular camera, it is much harder to misalign the lens to the focal plane.
Twenty years ago, I searched for lenses that created visible abnormalities for use in portraiture. I found that even primitive lenses like triplets and rapid rectilinears rendered surprisingly modern images. You have to go back to meniscus lenses to start to get visibly different looks. My guess is that the Skopars on those Perkeos are fine lenses, that got a bad rap because of the camera’s rickety mount.
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |