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What's your latest new old camera ? (Part 2)

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Is the release too sensitive to half-press and recompose?

With my Rebel G (or F4) the subject of focus is rarely dead center, so I half-press, recompose, and shoot.

Yes, but the way I work, i sometimes have to wait several minutes till pressing the shutter button (after i set focus). I can't keep the release at half-press for so long!

It's a shame because otherwise the EOS 650 is a very fine machine, nice sound, nice feel, great viewfinder (perhaps the best of the EOS cameras save for the 1-series), great battery life.

Both the F100 and N75 let me get and hold the focus and then frame the composition and then fire the shutter. A little RTFM might help.

I *always* RTFM, and the EOS 650 does not have that capability. My EOS 5 does have that feature.
 
Has someone somewhere written a glowing report as to how good they are :cool:

Good enough to shoot and be happy.

I have a sort of love hate relationship with my Yashica D. :smile:

Sometimes I think it is great to use , then sometimes it frustrates me for no reason or logic.

I then start thinking, should I try a medium format SLR, then reality kicks in, would there be any real advantage apart from lens interchangeability, so for now I'll stick with the simpler lighter TLR.

You can have lens interchangeability if you use a Mamiya TLR, which have lens interchangeability. There are people who say those TLRs are too big, etc, but on the other hand there are thousands of happy people (like me) that are very satisfied with them. I've used the Mamiyaflex C2, C220, and C330, they're all great.
 
You can has pre-AI lenses caturday!

I'm very fond of pre-AI lenses and have quite a few. It's also nice that most are inexpensive compared to their AI, AIS, and AF counterparts.

Surprised that APUG doesn't have a Caturday (yet).
 
I'm very fond of pre-AI lenses and have quite a few. It's also nice that most are inexpensive compared to their AI, AIS, and AF counterparts.

Surprised that APUG doesn't have a Caturday (yet).

My recent collecting of pre-AI lenses have made me appreciate Nikon again (over Canon, whose FD/FL lenses I love).
 
It was my birthday early this month, I told my wife I needed a camera with more resolution or mega-pixels, a Canon 5 D Mk III would be ok. So I got a sweater and a shirt,

Today I finally made the Upgrade . . . . . . . . a British 12"x10" un-named field camera, so finally I'm a member of the ULF club.

Ian
 
It's a camera I'd buy well done, I've a;ways wanted one. Use it well.

Ian

Right now, the focus is frozen. I think that the plastic window from the focus scale has fallen inside and is jamming the mechanism up. Hopefully it will be a simple fix.
 
Not very old, but new to me:

96947a1c77e0ee9bd830aec732850e47.jpg


A Sinar F (sorry for the really crappy iPhone photo)!

Now I just need to learn to use this beauty!


Flavio
 
A Sputnik medium format stereo camera with a very broken shutter and sticky left iris
 
With the reflex finder shown, it may as well be considered a TLR.

Same with the prism finder available.

But in normal use, with just a ground glass behind the upper lens, showing a reversed and inverted image, it may be Twin Lens, but it isn't Twin Lens Reflex.
 
Correct. The reflex part refers to the mirror.

sometimes TLR, sometimes TL

but TLR as pictured.
 
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Just got it two days ago. Heavy as it looks. The viewfinder is awesome. Maybe if we ever get a thaw I will take it out to play.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I've never seen that before and don't understand why it's not technically a TLR. Does the finder not look through the upper viewing lens?

The finder is an accessory. Normally, you would focus off of the ground glass on the back of the camera, there is no internal reflex mirror. It is more of a twin lens view camera.
 
The finder is an accessory. Normally, you would focus off of the ground glass on the back of the camera, there is no internal reflex mirror. It is more of a twin lens view camera.

My parents bought me a koniflex as a gradation present when I graduated from college in 1970, I kept it a couple of years, lens are really sharp, but I could not get using to it when taking horizontal landscapes, 6X7 format, so I traded it for Mamyia C 33. Looking back I think the 90mm lens was sharper than the 80mm on the Mamyia. For portraits a fine camera. The backs are interchangeable with Konica Rapid press cameras.
 
Bought an Olympus XA w/ A16 flash off eBay for $25.00

I already had 2 of them but I couldn't pass it up. Seller said it didn't work so I figured at least I could use it for parts. When I got it I removed the battery, cleaned the compartment with a moist q-tip and baking soda, put in a new battery and presto, a perfectly working XA !
 
Contax G2 with 28mm, 45mm, and 90mm lenses to replace a kit I stupidly sold years ago.
 
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