Malcolm_J
Member
Hello, I am glad I have at last registered for this excellent forum. I recently discovered Soviet rangefinders by accident whilst I was looking to buy a cheap SLR. I now have a FED2d and a Kiev 4a. Both excellent in their own way. I am massively impressed by the images from the FED in particular, with its Industar-61 lense. I have never seen pictures from any 35mm camera of any quality with such clarity and eery contrast. The Kiev is maybe just as good, but I've only run a single test film through it on a lousy Edinburgh December day, so I can't judge it fairly yet.
I was hoping the expertise here could answer my cusiosity on a few points.
1) What are the relative merits and drawbacks of the I-61 versus the I-50. I notice the Zorki 6 and some Zorki 4s are fitted with the I-50. It has a smaller maximum aperture than the I-50, which seems a drawback to me. Does it have advantages in other areas? I was thinking of getting a Zorki and was interested in knowing more about this lense.
2) My Kiev is functionally excellent (I imported it from a Russian seller on eBay). It arrived promptly in a little box, all intact! One gripe I have with it is that the focusing ring is rather loose in the camera body. There is visible play and rattle. I was thinking of returning it, but it does not affect the function so I didn't bother. Still, it is irritating and I would try and shim it out if that were feasible. Anyone have a fix?
I am aware of a similar problem with slackness between the lense and the mounting ring. This is described on the Kieve survival site. My problem is definitely the focusing ring, the lense itself is a perfect fit.
Something to watch out for when you buy a Kiev 4a is that the Helios lense is longer and heavier than a Jupiter. This means the case will no longer fit, without a hell of a struggle at least, over the lense, and the camera out of its case is nose-heavy. Just an annoyance, but be aware of it.
Many thanks, hope to here from you.
I was hoping the expertise here could answer my cusiosity on a few points.
1) What are the relative merits and drawbacks of the I-61 versus the I-50. I notice the Zorki 6 and some Zorki 4s are fitted with the I-50. It has a smaller maximum aperture than the I-50, which seems a drawback to me. Does it have advantages in other areas? I was thinking of getting a Zorki and was interested in knowing more about this lense.
2) My Kiev is functionally excellent (I imported it from a Russian seller on eBay). It arrived promptly in a little box, all intact! One gripe I have with it is that the focusing ring is rather loose in the camera body. There is visible play and rattle. I was thinking of returning it, but it does not affect the function so I didn't bother. Still, it is irritating and I would try and shim it out if that were feasible. Anyone have a fix?
I am aware of a similar problem with slackness between the lense and the mounting ring. This is described on the Kieve survival site. My problem is definitely the focusing ring, the lense itself is a perfect fit.
Something to watch out for when you buy a Kiev 4a is that the Helios lense is longer and heavier than a Jupiter. This means the case will no longer fit, without a hell of a struggle at least, over the lense, and the camera out of its case is nose-heavy. Just an annoyance, but be aware of it.
Many thanks, hope to here from you.