Kev T
Established
Hello All,
I'm new to the RFF. I'm a photographer who sometimes moonlights as a TV commercial director as well. I'd just mailed an old friend and fellow photographer, a message with some crackpot RF camera ideas, which I'd thought I'd share here as my inaugural post, and would certainly love to hear some or your comments:
David,
To 99% of today's photographers, a rangefinder camera is considered archaic, and by default, something of little interest.
The raison d'etre for an RF camera is the ability to focus much faster than non AF SLR cameras, even SLRs with very bright viewfinders of the late 1980s and early 90s... Especially in low light conditions! Focusing through a bright frame RF viewfinder is a joy, hence the many supporters of the Leica M especially amongst photographers with relatively weaker eye-sight... something we're both fast approaching! :-(
Today, we're mainly spoilt by AF technology, but AF even with the most sophisticated electronics works down to about EV 1 with good subject contrast and not even there when subject contrast is flat. By comparison, one can still focus with the coupled RF in near total darkness, so this is something technology hasn't caught up with yet...
Further to this, RF cameras are by nature very compact and much lighter than SLRs... Today's cheap & nasty SLRs (in the D50 / 70 or 350D class) uses penta-mirrors rather than optical glass penta-prisms to save weight, but suffers from being less bright than real penta-prisms, yet if one were to shave off the entire reflex mirror box + penta-mirror assembly, one should still reasonably save between 200 - 300 grams from the camera's overall weight! Considering that such cameras weigh about 800 - 900 grams, that is a lot!
Coming back to the idea of digital RF camera, so we have one example today; the Epson RD-1S, and as we know it has so far been a futile marketing exercise! Is this proof that the digital RF concept doesn't work?
Far from it, I think the Epson RD-1 is a camera born at the wrong place, at the wrong time, and at the wrong price! This is a prime example of Japanese corporate folly. No track record, no camera tradition, no lens, totally wrong corporate image as manufacturers of inkjet printers! So now, a fine product is now left with it's tail between its legs cowering back in its home market and deem by its makers as not profitable enough to be exported... Truly sad, because that is surely the first step to its eventual demise from the production lines.
Imagine, if it wasn't sold as Epson, but as a Voigtlander Bessa Digital instead? Throw out the old 6.1Mp Sony CCD sensor and say drop in the new Sony 10.2Mp CCD, or even the Sony 12.4Mp Cmos instead... A 12.4Mp Voigtlander D Bessa, now we're cooking! Ok. forget about the cheap Cosina platform, and substitute the Nikon S3-2000 RF body instead... The most recent version is Nikon's S3 Anniversary which was announced just after the F6 intro, making it the absolute last film camera they made... The S3 RF body is an all metal precision body with the kind of rich heritage and tradition that is not found in any of Nikon's newest models.
All Nikon has to do is to use the 12.4Mp D2X sensor in the RF body, and voila! Instant very hot classic collector's camera that has the potential to sell by the millions... With a common Leitz M lens-mount, they don't even need to make any new lens for this camera, though of course Nikon being Nikon will insist upon doing so! It doesn't matter whichever lens mount, M or Nikon RF-S mount, I can guarantee they won't be able to make enough to sell.
Ok here's the cruncher... being a new millennium camera, Nikon can even install AF with a defeat switch for those who insist on focusing manually! Nothing new here, I believe its been done with the Contax G2. Another tip for Nikon, being a 'limited' production camera, Nikon can even make it with an all Titanium body. NOW I'M TURNING ON MYSELF! PANT! PANT! PANT!
Half the weight of the cumbersome D2X, hell, if they re-issue the 45mm f2.8 P pancake lens, they even make this a pocketable 12.4Mp digi-RF camera too! I can go on and on about the very sound business proposition for making such a camera... Best of all for Nikon, no competition from Canon.
Zeiss can do the same thing with their Zeiss Ikon rangefinder with a Dalsa or Kodak FF sensor and get as much market excitement as a Nikon RF camera re-issue model.
The Epson RD-1 was simply too early for their own good, but with a Digital M from Leica imminent, the timing now is right for more digital RF cameras... Both Zeiss Ikon and Nikon who kept their S seiries RF camera tooling alive with periodic commenmorative issues are in favorable position to do something about this. Then Cosina can contact Fill Factory to install that $90 9Mp Cmos into their Voigtlander Bessas for very little development investment, taking the lessons they learnt from making RD-1s for Epson, to join in the fun.
Regards,
Kev
I'm new to the RFF. I'm a photographer who sometimes moonlights as a TV commercial director as well. I'd just mailed an old friend and fellow photographer, a message with some crackpot RF camera ideas, which I'd thought I'd share here as my inaugural post, and would certainly love to hear some or your comments:
David,
To 99% of today's photographers, a rangefinder camera is considered archaic, and by default, something of little interest.
The raison d'etre for an RF camera is the ability to focus much faster than non AF SLR cameras, even SLRs with very bright viewfinders of the late 1980s and early 90s... Especially in low light conditions! Focusing through a bright frame RF viewfinder is a joy, hence the many supporters of the Leica M especially amongst photographers with relatively weaker eye-sight... something we're both fast approaching! :-(
Today, we're mainly spoilt by AF technology, but AF even with the most sophisticated electronics works down to about EV 1 with good subject contrast and not even there when subject contrast is flat. By comparison, one can still focus with the coupled RF in near total darkness, so this is something technology hasn't caught up with yet...
Further to this, RF cameras are by nature very compact and much lighter than SLRs... Today's cheap & nasty SLRs (in the D50 / 70 or 350D class) uses penta-mirrors rather than optical glass penta-prisms to save weight, but suffers from being less bright than real penta-prisms, yet if one were to shave off the entire reflex mirror box + penta-mirror assembly, one should still reasonably save between 200 - 300 grams from the camera's overall weight! Considering that such cameras weigh about 800 - 900 grams, that is a lot!
Coming back to the idea of digital RF camera, so we have one example today; the Epson RD-1S, and as we know it has so far been a futile marketing exercise! Is this proof that the digital RF concept doesn't work?
Far from it, I think the Epson RD-1 is a camera born at the wrong place, at the wrong time, and at the wrong price! This is a prime example of Japanese corporate folly. No track record, no camera tradition, no lens, totally wrong corporate image as manufacturers of inkjet printers! So now, a fine product is now left with it's tail between its legs cowering back in its home market and deem by its makers as not profitable enough to be exported... Truly sad, because that is surely the first step to its eventual demise from the production lines.
Imagine, if it wasn't sold as Epson, but as a Voigtlander Bessa Digital instead? Throw out the old 6.1Mp Sony CCD sensor and say drop in the new Sony 10.2Mp CCD, or even the Sony 12.4Mp Cmos instead... A 12.4Mp Voigtlander D Bessa, now we're cooking! Ok. forget about the cheap Cosina platform, and substitute the Nikon S3-2000 RF body instead... The most recent version is Nikon's S3 Anniversary which was announced just after the F6 intro, making it the absolute last film camera they made... The S3 RF body is an all metal precision body with the kind of rich heritage and tradition that is not found in any of Nikon's newest models.
All Nikon has to do is to use the 12.4Mp D2X sensor in the RF body, and voila! Instant very hot classic collector's camera that has the potential to sell by the millions... With a common Leitz M lens-mount, they don't even need to make any new lens for this camera, though of course Nikon being Nikon will insist upon doing so! It doesn't matter whichever lens mount, M or Nikon RF-S mount, I can guarantee they won't be able to make enough to sell.
Ok here's the cruncher... being a new millennium camera, Nikon can even install AF with a defeat switch for those who insist on focusing manually! Nothing new here, I believe its been done with the Contax G2. Another tip for Nikon, being a 'limited' production camera, Nikon can even make it with an all Titanium body. NOW I'M TURNING ON MYSELF! PANT! PANT! PANT!
Half the weight of the cumbersome D2X, hell, if they re-issue the 45mm f2.8 P pancake lens, they even make this a pocketable 12.4Mp digi-RF camera too! I can go on and on about the very sound business proposition for making such a camera... Best of all for Nikon, no competition from Canon.
Zeiss can do the same thing with their Zeiss Ikon rangefinder with a Dalsa or Kodak FF sensor and get as much market excitement as a Nikon RF camera re-issue model.
The Epson RD-1 was simply too early for their own good, but with a Digital M from Leica imminent, the timing now is right for more digital RF cameras... Both Zeiss Ikon and Nikon who kept their S seiries RF camera tooling alive with periodic commenmorative issues are in favorable position to do something about this. Then Cosina can contact Fill Factory to install that $90 9Mp Cmos into their Voigtlander Bessas for very little development investment, taking the lessons they learnt from making RD-1s for Epson, to join in the fun.
Regards,
Kev