hoot
green behind the ears
Being that the Jupiter-12 is such a great bang for the buck, I was wondering how different people actually used it on their FSU rangefinders, which all show the approximate 50mm FOV.
hoot said:Being that the Jupiter-12 is such a great bang for the buck, I was wondering how different people actually used it on their FSU rangefinders, which all show the approximate 50mm FOV.
hoot said:but then, vertical parallax is a problem with any shoe-mounted finder. I borrowed Roman's KMZ turret finder for a day, and chopped off people's heads with it even after considering parallax.
Well, I usually get quite close (see my gallery)...Nickfed said:Shooting at one metre with it can't be a good idea, but the difference from the standard finder is only 1 deg. 20, so it cannot be that bad either.
Oh, agreed. I eventually shelled out for an old collapsible Summicron, but the Jupiter-8 outperforms it on all counts. The problem - and this is an opinion I developed before being sneered at by the Leica snobs - is that "good handling" applies not only to bodies, but to lenses, too. The M3 handles well; the J-8 does not. The Summicron handles well, and - I say this without shame - looks better on the M3, too. It's not necessarily other people I want to "dress up" for - it's mostly myself. I put on a nice shirt in the morning even if I'm not planning to leave the house that day. If the Jupiter took a clip-on lens shade (I detest the screw-in ones), had aperture click-stops and boasted a gorgeous chrome finish, I'd be using it on the M3 much more often.Nickfed said:If there is one crowd in life you should studiously ignore, it's the Leicaphiles. You can be reasonably sure that most of them don't know what they are doing. There are also times when you should ignore your own father, particularly when he has a pompous attitude like this.