MartinCrabtree
Member
oooohhhhhh naked photographers.............interesting concept. 

And I prefer paying by check sometimes when payday is a couple days off and I want something NOW. And in those cases I throw a fit if they scan it and treat it as a debit card. If I wanted to use a card I'D USE A FREAKING CARD.
Wayne:
In most cases now paper cheques are not returned to cheque writers through their banks. The financial institutions that they are deposited to just scan them and they are immediately processed electronically. The paper cheques are destroyed, leaving only an electronic image.
Some large retailers and other payment processors don't even have to send the cheques to the bank - they have the scanning equipment on site and process them directly themselves.
At my law office I used to handle property transfers. The government office that we sent the documents to had such equipment in place for the cheques used for filing taxes. If our documents were filed at 11:00 a.m., monies would be out of our trust chequing account by noon.
This was ten years ago.
Stone, these days paper checks are treated like bank cards. In most cases the recipient scans them and payment is electronically debited from the sender's account immediately. Some people prefer payment by check for their type of record-keeping. Others prefer to send money orders to prevent ID theft.
..? You are pretty terrible with context, Stone.
What does my method of payment have to do with anything?
Sorry I just didn't understand why you would do that instead of just using a debit card that's all, it just takes longer to get your purchase and more wasted paper to submit the catalogue item and envelope and stamp and chance of lost mail. Just find it less efficient. No offense intended.
I posted earlier that I bought a very rare lens but wouldn't say more until it's in my hands. I have it now but the aperture is very stiff and it looks like there's some edge separation. I'm thinking having it properly restored is worth ever penny. What do you folks think?
This is a 112mm Suter Basel Series IV f/12.5 Anastigmat that, according to the Vade Mecum, is only two or three known to exist in the world. I don't know if this is one of two referred two in the V-M or if it's a third example. This pic is of just the front cell. The barrel is soaking to (hopefully) loosen the aperture and the rear cell is set to the side.
Do any of you know anything about this lens?
Wayne:
In most cases now paper cheques are not returned to cheque writers through their banks. The financial institutions that they are deposited to just scan them and they are immediately processed electronically. The paper cheques are destroyed, leaving only an electronic image.
Some large retailers and other payment processors don't even have to send the cheques to the bank - they have the scanning equipment on site and process them directly themselves.
At my law office I used to handle property transfers. The government office that we sent the documents to had such equipment in place for the cheques used for filing taxes. If our documents were filed at 11:00 a.m., monies would be out of our trust chequing account by noon.
This was ten years ago.
Some places don't accept credit cards. I am not offended. Only puzzled.
I've inly seen that at back woods type restaurants but not photo supply places *shrug* I'm not very worldly
O-n-F, are you sure you're quoting correctly from the VM? I ask because my copies of the second and third editions don't have the words Series IV or f/12.5 in their Suter sections. They also don't mention "only two or three known to exist in the world." It could be that Matt Wilkinson saw only a few examples.
Suter made Zeiss designs under license. I think what you have is a Serie IV f/12.5 Anastigmat Protar that Suter made under license. If so, not as rare as you think. And if so, probably usable on formats up to 5x7.
few such lenses have been seen: in fact two Series IV f12.5 eg at 112mm No44,47x are the only ones
Kardan re
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