Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1992/10/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Some more that nobody's mentioned yet: - the Olympus RC, RD and SP. These are leaf-shutter, non-interchangeable- lens rangefinders from the 70s. The RC has an f2.8 lens (42mm, I think), the others have an f1.7. I have an RC. It gives you shutter priority or manual exposure. It's very quiet and unobtrusive; looks almost the same as a Trip 35. Very sharp lens, though somewhat cold-toned glass. The SP is much bigger, larger than a Leica M6, and has spot metering. I haven't seen an RD. Olympus also made reduced-functionality versions, the DC and EC - these either lose manual exposure control or else the rangefinder (I forget which but can look it up if anyone really needs to know) and have cheaper lenses. - Zeiss Super Ikontas. There were several models of these made over a period from the Thirties to the Fifties. I have two, a 6x4.5 (uncoated f3.5 75mm Tessar) and a 6x9 (uncoated f4.5 105mm Tessar). I use the 6x4.5 heavily for shoot-from-the-hip pictures; it is very easy to look as though you're just fiddling with an antique when you're really taking someone's picture at only an arm's-length distance. The movement required to fire the shutter is so unlike anything most people are familiar with, and the sound so quiet, that I can routinely take four shots of someone sitting opposite me on the underground without them ever realizing what I'm up to. (This is using eyeball focusing). I generally use HP5+ at 3200 ASA for this sort of thing. When folded, it's about 50% bigger than an Olympus XA and smaller than any modern zoom compact. Its one major problem is that there is no good way to attach a lens hood; I use a push-on hood which covers up the distance scale, so I've marked a scale on the hood, but this doesn't get round the other problem, which is that I frequently end up fishing the hood out of the gutter after bumping into someone. The 6x9 is nothing like as useful; much more bulky and more prone to flare, and I'm going to get rid of it shortly. I've tried it for mountain photography but prefer a TLR for this. Both models of Super Ikonta have direct-vision viewfinders and separate rangefinders that are truly horrible to use (later models fixed this). Both use 120 film, with a little red window and no coupling between the winder and the shutter. When you get used to this it's no problem at all, though you get a few multiple exposures before the protocol (wind immediately after every shot, cock just before shooting) becomes habitual. I haven't used a Plaubel Makina, but I believe they are rather similar to the Super Ikonta. Zeiss made other much-imitated cameras without the rangefinder, like the Nettar, with variable-quality lenses. -- Jack Campin room G092, Computing Science Department, Glasgow University, 17 Lilybank Gardens, Glasgow G12 8RZ, Scotland TEL: 041 339 8855 x6854 (work) INTERNET: jack@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk or via nsfnet-relay.ac.uk FAX: 041 330 4913 BANG!net: via mcsun and uknet BITNET: via UKACRL UUCP: jack@glasgow.uucp