I just got myself a S2 kit:
Body, 50mm, 75mm, 105, 135mm, 200mm lenses, couple hoods, two 6x6 backs, wlf, prism, loupe, pistol grip, strap, sport finder (well ...), close-up lenses for the 200mm, a polaroïd back
the fun story there, is that I was intensely looking for a Rolleiflex SL66 these last couple weeks and was this close to buy one with two backs for 8000 kr , but then add some 300 kr for shipment from Germany, plus 20% norwegian vat + customs processing fee, but this morning on the local norwegian ads site I spotted this kit for 10.000kr. Went to check the working of the body, condition, lenses. It wasn't used for years and before not much it seems.
Now, I am mostly a Salyut shooter. I mean Salyut, not Kiev-88, it's not exactly the same feeling. Since I am back to purely *mechanical* film MF, choice is scarce: Salyut/Kiev, Bronica S (and C), Mamiya RB67, Hasselblad 500, Rolleiflex SL66.
I prefer to avoid leaf shutter lenses, so Hasselblad is out, and RB67 too.And just the name Hasselblad does irk me, like the name Leica in 35mm RF.
I prefer a camera I can carry along anywhere, so Mamiya RB67 is out too there, a bit too big.
I was left with Bronica S or Rolleiflex SL66. I want the SL66 because the bellows and tilt, and it's said to be more reliable.
But after finding that Bronica kit I just bought it.
An important point I think with these mechanical bodies, is that you must be a tinkerer, used to disassemble and fix things. Because servicemen are a specie in extinction and so few that it would take lot of time in shipment and money to fix.
The Salyut/Kiev are excellent for a tinkerer because you can find easily bodies for parts, the technical manuals are available, and in case you fail , you can still find many repairmen in Ukraine and Russia. Can keep one or two bodies going, while another is getting serviced for the usual stuff once in a while (curtains banding, worn winding, whatever).
The Bronica S2 seems to be another beast, I have no clue how much I could fix myself, but the idea is to buy some jammed body for cheap in order to learn.
In case the one I have now gets broken, I can buy some other body from Japan for reasonable price.
Also, as an amateur, I will not be shooting tons of rolls at a fast rate like mad. I think it's a reason some of these mechanical boxes got bad reputations back in the time: they could'nt keep with very intensive use.
The rest I suspect is gossips and memes being repeated to agony, like it is the case about the Kiev-88.
the S2 compared to my main Salyut, in similar kit: a normal lens (the Nikkor 75mm on the Bronica, the Vega-12 90mm on the Salyut, prism). I have no problem no handhold, the S2 is a bit more fat but easy for the hand. Could easily spend the day walking around with. I do it with a Salyut and a Kaleinar 150 mm.
shutter noise: different but equally loud. Not for a church, and if by the lake watching birds you can take only one shot, after what all birds fly somewhere else, but at least you got the one shot. The Bronica isn't louder than the Salyut. I guess the venerable Hasselblad 1000f is in the same category.
What I don't like with the Bronica is the prism, the Arsenal prism for the Salyut is a delight, but the one for the S2 I just don't know what the japanese were thinking, it's dim and the eye diminutive. I think I will hack a frankenstein by removing the base plate/mount of both and screwing the Arsenal on the Bronica base.