Hassy 503CW and XPan II
My favourite MF camera overall is my 503CW with its CW winder and the PM45 prism finder. I just adore using this baby - even in the street!
When size is an issue (not so "bulky"), my 501CM with the WLF and the CFE 80mm lens is superbly compact (yes, compact!) and a joy to handle and use with passion. Part of Victor Hasselblad's mastery was enabling these 6x6 machines to remain relatively compact. I "cut my MF teeth" for 15 years with a Bronica SQA. Since Tamron totally waster money buying Bronica only to do nothing with a very fine camera maker, I am releived I moved to Hasselblad; although I nearly bought an ETRSi, which is a wonderful MF camera. Alas I prefer 6x6.
My favourite "alternative" MF camera is the Hassy XPan II. With the 45mm and 90mm lenses it's all one could ever need - a superb MF panoramic camera and a convenient conventional 135 format top quality RF camera all in one!
BUT, many (like I was initially) are "put off" the XPan because they misunderstand what this wonderful piece of engineering really is. No, it is not a 135 format RF camera with bigger and slow lenses. It IS is an MF camera providing 6x7 frames horizontally cropped to a panoramic image. It happens to use 135 film and offer convenience of a conventional 135 frame as well. A 2 week "play" with a loaner made me "see the light".
I personally never use it in conventional 135 format mode.
So, my XPan II is the perfect complement to my Hassey 6x6 kit - for the wide angle images I see and far prefer to capture as a panorama.
It is also a perfect complement to my Leica M7 for when I want to shoot wide angle, which I discovered some time ago I "see" as a panorama and all my M7 wide angle images ended up being "cropped" horizontally, leaving me very little film frame to make useful top quality prints.
So, that's my story! And it's one of my first postings on this wonderful site; well done APUG.