R
ruben
Guest
Some of you know the start, as I have already written, that with my first Konica Auto S2 I went mad to find where is the damn acclaimed built in hood. That Konica, at least cosmetically was hard to beat.
At that time I didn't know that not all Konicas come with the damn built in attachment and hood, either because this way they left the factory, or because the previous user dismounted it from the camera.
I went so crazy trying to extract the built in hood from a non-existant built in hood, that I broke some inside pin in charge that the front metering cell disk will not turn when you turn the speed ring.
Alongside this damage, I lost the light metering connections reaching the front cell. The wires are there to soldier, but are so thin and short that it will be a messy job to start. So the camera works without auto. Fine.
Recently I purchased three Konicas, one of them still in transit, but the other two came with the damn built in hood. Personally I find a pleasure to manipulate these biggie cameras. I have black masked all of the front upper crome side and added softies for more conspicuous finger joint firing.
It is also a great pleasure to have these shiny black cases. Everything looks ok, but the built in hoods:
a) They are too short to really take advantage of the relative narrowness of field of the 45mm lens even at f/1.8. They may fit a 28mm lens, but are a waist in foreign light prevention for a 45mm lens taking into account the lens size.
b) Due to the screw attaching the lower case to the body, when you lean the camera on a table, without the upper case, the camera "falls" on its nose, i,e, on the damn buit in hood, that can be when it is extended or recessed and in both cases I get a bad feeling. Ceirtanly it is not the confidence exuding metal Hoya hood.
c) Most of the times I forget to extend outwards the damn built in hood, and when I do it, it has a natural tendency to go back inwards, leaving the lens unprotected.
c1) Btw, when this happens my fingers may touch the front lens surface, as I am absolutely used to metal hoods. Fixed metald hoods.
So, obviously I am going to dismount these damn built in hoods, and use these cameras like any other camera, with permanent hoods when uncased and hood unscrewed and over the lens when the upper case is on place.
C'est la vie
and for Spanish speaking folks - a slight variation: Se la vi, y no me gusto
Cheers,
Ruben
At that time I didn't know that not all Konicas come with the damn built in attachment and hood, either because this way they left the factory, or because the previous user dismounted it from the camera.
I went so crazy trying to extract the built in hood from a non-existant built in hood, that I broke some inside pin in charge that the front metering cell disk will not turn when you turn the speed ring.
Alongside this damage, I lost the light metering connections reaching the front cell. The wires are there to soldier, but are so thin and short that it will be a messy job to start. So the camera works without auto. Fine.
Recently I purchased three Konicas, one of them still in transit, but the other two came with the damn built in hood. Personally I find a pleasure to manipulate these biggie cameras. I have black masked all of the front upper crome side and added softies for more conspicuous finger joint firing.
It is also a great pleasure to have these shiny black cases. Everything looks ok, but the built in hoods:
a) They are too short to really take advantage of the relative narrowness of field of the 45mm lens even at f/1.8. They may fit a 28mm lens, but are a waist in foreign light prevention for a 45mm lens taking into account the lens size.
b) Due to the screw attaching the lower case to the body, when you lean the camera on a table, without the upper case, the camera "falls" on its nose, i,e, on the damn buit in hood, that can be when it is extended or recessed and in both cases I get a bad feeling. Ceirtanly it is not the confidence exuding metal Hoya hood.
c) Most of the times I forget to extend outwards the damn built in hood, and when I do it, it has a natural tendency to go back inwards, leaving the lens unprotected.
c1) Btw, when this happens my fingers may touch the front lens surface, as I am absolutely used to metal hoods. Fixed metald hoods.
So, obviously I am going to dismount these damn built in hoods, and use these cameras like any other camera, with permanent hoods when uncased and hood unscrewed and over the lens when the upper case is on place.
C'est la vie
and for Spanish speaking folks - a slight variation: Se la vi, y no me gusto
Cheers,
Ruben