For me it depends what I am doing. That is why in post #11 I said:
My Nikon n8008s has all the important stuff. Big viewfinder that lets me see the whole frame even w/ my glasses on, takes cheapo AA batteries, has a spot meter, 1/8000 top shutter speed, AE and AE Lock, all that and more......for $40. Unlike another poster here, I gave up on the Leica R bodies. My R3/4/5 cameras were sorta crappy w/ shutter lag issues, and that R3 weighed a ton. Dark viewfinder too.
A Leicaflex is so much better than any of the R bodies (best viewfinder of any camera ever made), but my favorite Leica R camera is the Nikon n8008s w/ an adapter to shoot my Leicaflex 90 lens.
My favorite camera depends on what day of the week it is.
Second choice would be Pentax MX and third choice would be my Nikon F2SB.
I like the sound of the shutter of my Nikkormat FTN.
Agreed!Indeed it sounds beautiful. And it feels so solid in the hand!!
Superb and characterful lens which looks likely to be the same one used on the 6x6 model. So any vignette and corner problems is cut off by the masking.
Well you haven’t seen many then. My Tessars on 6x6 are 75mm.Every 6x6 Zeiss folder I've seen had an 80 mm lens; that one is 75 mm. Then again, I've never seen vignetting or corner problems with either 75 mm or 80 mm triplets or Tessars (and clones). My 1948 Super Ikonta B with 80 mm f/2.8 Tessar has some overall softness when wider than f/4, but that's a limitation of one of the earliest Tessar lenses that large and fast -- and isn't limited to the corners.
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