raid
Dad Photographer
This is an accomplishment indeed. Its usefulness may get questioned, but it definitely takes guts and engineering skills to get it done.
Haven't been working much on it, aside from using it for intended purpose (testing the lenses I convert).
However, the other day I bumped the back and it developed a fascinating glitch, a bit of a surreal look. Not sure if I should even fix it!
Still Life / DMM by varjagg, on Flickr
The lens on camera was a French beauty, Som Berthiot Paris Flor 50/3.5 collapsible, without IRUV cut-off filter.
If anyone would think of repeating it, I'd suggest doing all communications via SERDES on a thinner cable.
Well there been attempts at Leica digital backs for as long as consumer digital is around, and people would likely try that in the future.
The hardest and most tedious part by far is grinding down the ceramic sensor enclosure to fit camera film rail at correct working distance. If one is content at gutting a camera it can be done much easier; however I wanted to keep the back optional and retain the original functionality.
So basically we are left with three approaches:
a) grind down the chip as I did
b) find an aps-c chip that fits entirely into film gate and manufacture our own positioning surface on the custom back
c) order a custom shape enclosure for the sensor.
Option a) is what I did. Option b) is by far the easiest and is suitable for mass production, but you have to find a chip tiny enough. Option c) is available only for volume manufacturers.