The Yashica TLRs are popular but so often plagued by sticky shutter, they're a complete risk to buy. I'd say most listed for sale have been "fixed" with lighter fluid.
Admittedly, the Yashinon lens is very good.
Yes I agree the 4 element Yashinon which is on my Yashica-Mat is very good. The Yashica A.B.C and D have the 3 element
Yashikor and or Yashimar which are not bad, but I think the later Yashinon is better..
On the sticky shutter issue you brought up...
Ive purchased 1 Yashica-Mat, 1 Yashica-D, 5 Yashica A's in the past 8 months off eBay all at super low prices with the intent of
restoring them and not one of them had any issue with a sticky shutter from the get go. In fact one of the Yashica A I got for $22
looked like it had been buried for 35 years. Before getting it, I thought it was going to be a parts camera. surprisingly the shutter fired
on all speeds right from the get go..I totally restored it.
Here's a before and after.
View attachment 277994 View attachment 278002
That looks pretty good. The Yashica LM I bought on ebay worked when I got it and quite suddenly developed a gummed up shutter. I fully expect it had a bit of Zippo fluid treatment before it was sent to me, just enough to make it work for a month or two.
Sounds like your shutter needs to be opened up and cleaned and re-oiled. Did you have it serviced?
Yes.. that Yashica A was a total restore... Surprisingly the lenses had no scratches,fungus, haze or cleaning marks on them.
The other ones I had got were not even close to the bad, just needed some minor cosmetic restore. All of them had totally working
shutters.
Actually one of them was mint in the original box I got for $36...Only thing missing was the nameplate...
View attachment 278022
No, I haven't had it serviced. I have a different Yashica tlr which works perfectly - and I don't really like using tlrs very much.So, it's just sitting in a cupboard being ignore....
Yashicamat main issue is not the lens but the back which cannot keep the film flat. In everyday life, it won't be an issue though, unless you shoot brick walls.
Do you have a 2.8 taking lens on your Yashicamat? If so, is it a 5 or 6 element lens?My Favorite to shoot with is my Yashica-Mat 2.8. The one I have is the latest model from 1971.
worth the hassle of loading the film into them
Contax/Yashica line of Contax SLRs
I know there was an issue with the mirror adhesive on some models. I've fortunately never encountered that issue across any of the Contax bodies I've had - two 167MT bodies, an RX, and now an RTS III. Maybe I've just been lucky, or maybe the issue was confined to the cheaper, older models (the 159mm, 137 and 139 quartz, etc). I know a lot of those also had severe issues with the covering on the body - a lot of the "leather"/leatherette deteriorated badly, so they look more like a dirty sheep than a camera. The rubber on one of my 167 bodies was pulling away a little, not enough to interfere with anything, but it did look a touch puckered.My M4-2 has what I consider the "insert film and pray" way of loading. It's the main reason I don't use it more.
I don't think anyone who's used one would argue with that. The Yashica lenses for those cameras are also very good. The cameras themselves suffer from some unfortunate material choices - including the adhesive that holds the mirror in place (maybe they did better on the RTS, I don't know).
My M4-2 has what I consider the "insert film and pray" way of loading. It's the main reason I don't use it more.
I know there was an issue with the mirror adhesive on some models. I've fortunately never encountered that issue across any of the Contax bodies I've had - two 167MT bodies, an RX, and now an RTS III. Maybe I've just been lucky, or maybe the issue was confined to the cheaper, older models (the 159mm, 137 and 139 quartz, etc). I know a lot of those also had severe issues with the covering on the body - a lot of the "leather"/leatherette deteriorated badly, so they look more like a dirty sheep than a camera. The rubber on one of my 167 bodies was pulling away a little, not enough to interfere with anything, but it did look a touch puckered.
I was going to say Leica M7. It is absurd that a used M7 is cheaper than a brand new MP!
What's wrong with your M4-2? I have had zero issues loading it, about the easiest camera outside a AF slr to load. Just follow the directions on the simple pictogram - drop the film in, extend the film leader into the spool as indicated, close the back. Wind on and you're set. Never failed for me whether using the M4-2, MP, MA, M7, M5... It's why Leica calls it the quick load system!
The big thing is to NOT PAY ANY ATTENTION to about 99.99% of the videos out there - including the one from Tamarkin - that shows you how to load the camera. They all claim that before you close the back you need to wind on several times to make sure it is correctly threaded etc. That messes things up as Leica designed it to read the tension from when the tulip spool thing on the film base plate comes into contact with the film lead when you close it up. It's why they have that pictogram!
That method of loading is fine with regular cameras like a Nikon F2, F3 etc, but they don't have the quick load system.
I developed my problem with that loading mechanic because I was using Rollei Superpan 200 almost all the time and it's extremely thin. Tmax or Tri-x or HP5 --- no problem. Thin film - it winds for a while then stalls. Or it doesn't start winding at all. What I've needed to do with it is, as I push the back closed, poke the film into the spool toward the top of the camera. Otherwise, the sprocket won't go into the holes.
I don't watch any Youtube videos about anything. It's not likely I'll copy anything from one of them.
Right now K1000s are one of the "flavor of the month" cameras and clueless buyers are paying too much for them. Especially the last China model with plastic body parts and a viewfinder guaranteed to bleed black goop.
The early K1000 models are much nicer (if not abused) and more solidly built but the newbies don't know how to ID those. Or, better yet, get one of the more upscale K models like the KM, KX, K2 etc. for less than a K1000.
Great cameras and still cheap. Shhh, hoping they stay underrated...Nikkormats... although they seem to have a bit of a cult following here... for good reason. I love 'em...
View attachment 278210
Great cameras and still cheap. Shhh, hoping they stay underrated...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?