ColdEye
Member
Looking for a bay 1 rolleiflex hood. I am currently using a generic bay 1 hood and it does not allow me to use the hood and a filter at the same time. PM me with what you have.
I had the same problem with my Autocord. I found a hood which uses the outer bayonet on the lens, thus freeing the inner bayonet for filters. Try filterfind.net, Tim has a fine selection of filters, hoods, etc.Looking for a bay 1 rolleiflex hood. I am currently using a generic bay 1 hood and it does not allow me to use the hood and a filter at the same time. PM me with what you have.
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Thank you for the laugh!
This is how the hood and filters on a Rolleiflex are supposed to work. Filters on the inner bayonet; hood on the outer. Look at the big auction site or check for the Fotodiox product via B&H or equivalent.I had the same problem with my Autocord. I found a hood which uses the outer bayonet on the lens, thus freeing the inner bayonet for filters. Try filterfind.net, Tim has a fine selection of filters, hoods, etc.
At least Rollei stuff and equivalents are more or less easily available, albeit at often high prices! I have a Voigtlander Vitessa folder with the f2 Ultron lens. The filters use an "interrupted" thread; on or off in 1/4 turn. Quick but uncommon, and the lens hood is REALLY hard to find!This is how the hood and filters on a Rolleiflex are supposed to work. Filters on the inner bayonet; hood on the outer. Look at the big auction site or check for the Fotodiox product via B&H or equivalent.
I had the same problem with my Autocord. I found a hood which uses the outer bayonet on the lens, thus freeing the inner bayonet for filters. Try filterfind.net, Tim has a fine selection of filters, hoods, etc.
Eli, genuine Rollei Bay filters and hoods do not appear on the film plane when used in their appropriate body, be it Bay I, II, III, or IV. Rollei designed them to be correct optically and not vignette. You don't need to go oversized. And using the correct hood, the viewing lens is not obscured. Really, it is vastly more satisfying to use the right equipment.The filter goes next to the lens, which, it in my opinion,is a good reason to use over large Bay or threaded lenses over the taking lens, with adapters, ie, 40.5mm, and a larger, wide hood for a 35mm, 50mm or 60mm lens that fits the oversized assembly, so as to avoid it appearing anywhere in the the film plane.
You focus first, then attach the filter and hood, and take the picture, and no worry about the viewing lens being obstructed.
IMO.
Eli, genuine Rollei Bay filters and hoods do not appear on the film plane when used in their appropriate body, be it Bay I, II, III, or IV. Rollei designed them to be correct optically and not vignette. You don't need to go oversized. And using the correct hood, the viewing lens is not obscured. Really, it is vastly more satisfying to use the right equipment.
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