Leica LTM 90mm bright finder

Leica M39 screw mount bodies/lenses

AnthonyM

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I just purchased a Leica 90mm brightline finder for my IIIF. I will use it with my 90mm Elmar. I expect it will arrive in a week or so. I plan on testing it before using it. However, I note from the photos of this finder that there is a dial on it which corrects for parallax at various distances. If you dial in a 7, it should correct for a 7 foot distance.

My 50mm Leica brightline finder does not have the dial which you can set for various distances. I saw a difference on film when the images were developed. The parallax problem was visable.

My question is: Is this finder very accurate, or will I also see a significant difference from what I see in the finder to what the camera actually records on film? I am counting on the finders adjustable distance dial to correct the parallax. I welcome comments from members who have actually used this neat looking little finder.
 
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I have such a Leitz finder for my 90mm. It gives more accurate framing than a fixed brightline finder. However it does not correct fully for parallax, no finder can, so one becomes practiced at judging fov with experience.

yours
FPJ
 
I just purchased a Leica 90mm brightline finder for my IIIF. I will use it with my 90mm Elmar. I expect it will arrive in a week or so. I plan on testing it before using it. However, I note from the photos of this finder that there is a dial on it which corrects for parallax at various distances. If you dial in a 7, it should correct for a 7 foot distance.

My 50mm Leica brightline finder does not have the dial which you can set for various distances. I saw a difference on film when the images were developed. The parallax problem was visable.

My question is: Is this finder very accurate, or will I also see a significant difference from what I see in the finder to what the camera actually records on film? I am counting on the finders adjustable distance dial to correct the parallax. I welcome comments from members who have actually used this neat looking little finder.

Cool :D I just bought the same excact thing yesterday
Rob.
 
Thanks for the info.

May I ask, how much would you correct for at 7 feet, which is the range I will be using? I use the camera in the verticle position. I assume I will have to pull the camera to the left a hair ?

Is correction needed, from your experience, both horizontally and vertically in the vertical position using this finder? I will be doing candid headshots for a yearbook.

I will do a test when I get the finder, but would still like your opinion from your actual experience.
 
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It will depend on the height of the camera body (actually on the distance between lens axis and the viewfinder). Less on Barnack, more on M, but most on a FED-4 :D
 
Thanks for the info.

May I ask, how much would you correct for at 7 feet, which is the range I will be using? I use the camera in the verticle position. I assume I will have to pull the camera to the left a hair ?

Is correction needed, from your experience, both horizontally and vertically in the vertical position using this finder? I will be doing candid headshots for a yearbook.

I will do a test when I get the finder, but would still like your opinion from your actual experience.

The dial on the viewfinder will compensate for the up/down parallax correction (that results from the VF being on a separate axis than the lens), but not for the change in effective focal length. So the framelines would actually need to be a little smaller if you are focused at 2m than at infinity.
 
Expect slight cutoff at top and more than shown at the bottom and correct slightly to the left. Frame your subject within the inner brackets for safety - this works for me, ymmv.

yours
FPJ
 
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