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wanders

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  1. Yes, I'll be replacing the door seals tomorrow. They don't look too awful but they're certainly a gooey mess in spots. I've been shooting my T3n a fair bit recently but my T4 has become the daily driver. I recently acquired an FT-1 Motor, which I'd wanted for quite some time.... it's giving the T4 some time off. Konica AR is new-to-me in the past 3 or so years, but has all but replaced my Pentax system (K and m42) as the favorite. Really enjoy those cameras and glass and wish I'd had a go much earlier on!
  2. This fella will be getting a workout soon; arrived to me yesterday. I've stared at the photo on the right many a time, a Christmas morning snap of my gramps opening up a gift camera in 1974 or thereabouts. I'm not 100% convinced I got the right one, but either way I've a yet another nice arrival. A couple years ago I was holding out hope that this one and several others would be unearthed from my grandparents' storage boxes but it seems a number of his old cameras have disappeared, likely by way of my aunt "tidying up" numerous times over the past decade. Ah well. After a quick consult with a friend, I re-adhered the mirror last night which had broken loose inside the mirror-box in shipping and had been flailing about in there, but luckily little-to-no damage to it. All cured and shined up this morning. A solidly made and reliable little shooter, evidently a lower-tier Topcon model but still quality (but for the sparse pickings in the UV mount variety), i'ts metering nicely and with working shutter-priority as well manual. A nifty little 70s example that's as of yet still comparatively dirt-cheap on the used market. A six-element Topcor 50/2.0 on the end of it. Love the bright-work at the end of the barrel.
  3. I've had one of these for quite a long while. A really fun take-anywhere affair that really gives surprisingly good results all things considered. Much moreso than I remember expecting from it originally.
  4. wanders

    Thanks, Rich. This was actually originally a test exposure for a film image long-exp of the same scene. But turned out it was better because the film was more expired than I'd realized and my reciprocity calculation went all to hell, so this was the keeper.
  5. I have a war-time Zeiss-Ikon Nettar that is quite nice with Anstigmat 105mm. The shutter bound a couple years back and I've not bothered with tinkering with it yet, largely because I enjoy my other 6x9 more (one of two I've had of the same) which is the Franka Rolfix II. Frankas don't seem to be as well known/remembered these days and go for less noticeably money. I'd shot with the 6x6 Franka Solida III many times before picking up the Rolfix II. Both are equipped with simple triplets, the Solida III with a Schneider Krueznach Radionar 80mm, and the Rolifix II with a Rodenstock Trinar 105. I love the rendering of the former. The latter on the Rolfix I've not quite figured out all its idiosyncrasies - sometimes it's wild, sometimes flat, sometimes sharp, but the edges and corners are usually at least somewhat soft, varying to incredibly so with lots of chroma activity. Still I like it a lot, and the Rolfix is lighter/simpler/more compact than others I've used. A most basic folder - which is also part of what I love about it. Here's a shot from last fall from it, and two from 3 or 4 years back. everything we could know better by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr ages by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr enter here by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr
  6. wanders

    moving mountain flow

    pentax 67 | smc 75/4.5 | fuji velvia 100f | epson v750

    © COPYRIGHT

  7. wanders

    kingston wet

    Franka Solida III | Radionar 80/2.9 Kodak Ektar 100 | Epson V750 wet-mount scan A wet-mount scan of a recent shot. Certainly a bit more detail. It's a bit of a pain but certainly worth the effort for large prints., Franka Solida III | Radionar 80/2.9 Kod

    © eyewanders Foto - Rosinbum 2016

  8. wanders

    © COPYRIGHT

  9. wanders

    Washington Olympic Coast, crab boats in the distance, phosphorescence in the surf in the foreground. One of a handful of 5 minute test exposures with the GR that I took to "test my work" after taking a 10 and 30 min exposure of this scene with a tighter l

    © Eyewanders Foto - Rosinbum 2016

  10. I'll carry on the kitty cat opening theme since I don't get to post these anywhere much. :) there are need to be some changes around heres by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr Konica Autoreflex T4 | Hexanon AR 50/1.4 | TMax 3200 this guy, priority 'shmael by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr Kiev 4a | Helios-103 | RDPIII the captain of her soul by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr Pentax MX | A50/1.4 or FA43/1.9 (I can't remember) | HP5 Plus push+1 the life by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr Pentacon Six TL | CZJ Biometar 80/2.8 | Provia 100F old whisker by Kevin Rosinbum (Eyewanders Foto), on Flickr CV Bessa R3M | CV Color Skopar 35/2.5 | Ilford HP5 Plus
  11. I am imagining this is too little too late, and judging from the username this person may well have posted and disappeared, but I had a question regarding this problem - are you *certain* that the shutter is firing at the same speed through the upper range? e.g. have are you judging this by sight with the film door opening and viewing the metal curtain? I ask because the TC and T4 both have much more pronounced mirror action sound when compared to the shutter action sound, and there is also generally more time between mirror-up and mirror-down in relation to the actuation of the shutter itself than in SLRs of most other brands. Point being, because the mirror is noticeably louder than the shutter, if you're not used to what a T4 or TC SOUNDS like, it does sound a bit like 1/60 and up is the same even when operation normally. You're correct - the TC and T4 (and earlier T series) are completely mechanical except for metering and AE aperture controlled (they are shutter priority AE cameras). I've revived more than half a dozen T4's (and twice that many TC's) in the past two years or so and I've yet to come across one that had shutter timing issues. That Copal is a bit of a tank in there. Like Mike mentioned, metering problems aren't uncommon, though even in that case I've only ever come across dirty or corroded contact inside that were at fault - they usually come back to life (even those that seem completely dead) with a decent cleaning.
  12. wanders

    kingdom come

    Exposure Date: 2008:07:16 19:25:03; Make: PENTAX Corporation; Model: PENTAX K100D Super; ExposureTime: 3/10 s; ISOSpeedRatings: 200; ExposureProgram: Manual; ExposureBiasValue: 0/10; MeteringMode: CenterWeightedAverage; Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode; FocalLength: 50 mm; FocalLengthIn35mmFilm: 75 mm; Software: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 (Windows);
  13. wanders

    coromandel dreaming

    Artist: Kevin Rosinbum (EyeWanders Photography); chickentender™; Exposure Date: 2010:02:18 11:49:14; ImageDescription: coromandel dreaming-4; Make: PENTAX; Model: PENTAX K-7; ExposureTime: 1/8000 s; ISOSpeedRatings: 200; ExposureProgram: Manual; ExposureBiasValue: 0/10; MeteringMode: CenterWeightedAverage; Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode; FocalLength: 50 mm; FocalLengthIn35mmFilm: 75 mm; Software: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 3.5 (Windows);
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