xayraa33
rangefinder user and fancier
A bizarre machine yet so neat and fully featured.. but an expensive flop of a 35mm RF camera.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOzEBDId1GQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOzEBDId1GQ
A bizarre machine yet so neat and fully featured.. but an expensive flop of a 35mm RF camera.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOzEBDId1GQ
I don't get the shiny film pressure plate?
An all-American classic. The worse part of the design was the shutter that was hard to manufacture & unreliable because it had to be overcomplicated to get around Leitz's & Zeiss Ikon's patents. And it's amazing that Kodak let the Joseph Mihalyi, the designer, convince them that a left-handed camera was the way of the future (he had more hits than duds, though). That said, if you can find 1 with a working shutter, they're actually reliable & amazing cameras, worth owning & using as an alternative to the same boring Leicas, Contaxes, Nikons, etc.
I have 2 working bodies & all the lenses except the elusive 153mm. 1 body just came back from repairs by Hayata Camera in Tokyo, the same shop that fixed Howard Baker's Ektras when he was Ambassador to Japan; the shutter finally broke down after its last servicing . . . by Kodak in 1962. Ken Ruth of Photography on Bald Mountain also serviced Ektras before he retired.
Here are my uploaded shots taken w/my Ektras & of my Ektras: https://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/eastmankodakektrac194041
If you want to learn more about the Ektra, Brian Wallen has a great page on his Kodak site: http://www.bnphoto.org/bnphoto/KodakEktraIndex.htm
The Bell & Howell Foton mentioned by Ambro51 is also a good camera system (I have a couple of those, too), w/a much better & reliable shutter & a fun motor drive, but it didn't have the range of lenses or interchangeable backs that the Ektra had. Kodak added a motor drive back for the Ektra II, but they made only a few Ektra IIs (4-6 I think), before closing the line. Howard Baker had 1 of them, R.I.P.
A bizarre machine yet so neat and fully featured.. but an expensive flop of a 35mm RF camera.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOzEBDId1GQ
Thank you for filling in more details on that interesting Kodak camera, furcafe..it is more fantastic that I even imagined and made in the 1940s ...and not even the Japanese camera makers of mid 1950s had anything so cool and complex although the Nikon SP of 1957 came a bit close.
From your Flickr samples that Ektar 50mm f1.9 lens produces some very nice 3D effect and a bokeh that is very unique that is not duplicated by any other vintage lens...I liked the photo product of that lens very much.