W
wlewisiii
Guest
Sometimes you just gotta leap in both feet first. On the 10th I saw a Kiev 5 with 10 minutes left, no bidders and the lowest minimum I'd seen yet on one. I bid the minimum and won it. The package from the Ukrain arrived today.
Opening the package, it arrived in it's never-ready case, well wrapped in cotton. I opened it up and did a basic inspection. The camera is in very good cosmetic condition. It is a bit more top heavy than my Kiev 4a but nothing like I'd been lead to expect from reading on the web. It's not really any worse than the Contax III with it's light meter way up there.
The light meter reacts to light, though I haven't checked it's accuracy. The lever advance works smoothly - perhaps not as smooth as King Leica, but better than some I've spent more for. The film counter works correctly. The shutter speeds are backwards to rest of the Kiev series, but lift and change works as always. I don't have a shutter speed tester, but running through them all gives appropriate indications so the speeds are probably within normal FSU tolerances. The rewind crank is a hoot - it unfolds from the side and takes many revolutions to rewind a roll. An idea better in concept than it will be in practice, I fear. The take up spool was missing, but I had a spare from a parts Contax III that fit fine. I loaded up a roll of Konica C41 BW that also was in todays mail (Thanks Fraley!) and did note that the rewind does turn with advancing the film for a confirmation that it's loaded correctly.
The finder is the real revalation on this camera. It's clear, bigger than the other Kievs and quite bright. The outside edge shows very nearly the same view as my home brew finder. Inside of that is the bright line for 50 mm. that is nice an easy to see. Inside of that are 4 angle marks at the corners of the 85mm FOV. The RF patch appears to be the same size as the traditional Contax/Kiev so it will work as a bit undersized 135mm finder. All in all this is a very nice finder and even if the rest didn't work out for arsenal, I wish they could have found a way to put it into the Kiev 4am/4m line. Since the 85 lines are apparenty a very late addition to the camera, it would appear that this camera (7204507) must have been near the end.
So far, I'm pretty favorably impressed. I'll get a chance tomorrow afternoon (since I work in the AM) to take it out and do some shooting. I hope the weather will be sunny and warm (at least what passes for warm in Wisconsin in February!) and get the roll one hour dunked and scanned. With luck, in 24 hours I'll have some results to share.
William
Opening the package, it arrived in it's never-ready case, well wrapped in cotton. I opened it up and did a basic inspection. The camera is in very good cosmetic condition. It is a bit more top heavy than my Kiev 4a but nothing like I'd been lead to expect from reading on the web. It's not really any worse than the Contax III with it's light meter way up there.
The light meter reacts to light, though I haven't checked it's accuracy. The lever advance works smoothly - perhaps not as smooth as King Leica, but better than some I've spent more for. The film counter works correctly. The shutter speeds are backwards to rest of the Kiev series, but lift and change works as always. I don't have a shutter speed tester, but running through them all gives appropriate indications so the speeds are probably within normal FSU tolerances. The rewind crank is a hoot - it unfolds from the side and takes many revolutions to rewind a roll. An idea better in concept than it will be in practice, I fear. The take up spool was missing, but I had a spare from a parts Contax III that fit fine. I loaded up a roll of Konica C41 BW that also was in todays mail (Thanks Fraley!) and did note that the rewind does turn with advancing the film for a confirmation that it's loaded correctly.
The finder is the real revalation on this camera. It's clear, bigger than the other Kievs and quite bright. The outside edge shows very nearly the same view as my home brew finder. Inside of that is the bright line for 50 mm. that is nice an easy to see. Inside of that are 4 angle marks at the corners of the 85mm FOV. The RF patch appears to be the same size as the traditional Contax/Kiev so it will work as a bit undersized 135mm finder. All in all this is a very nice finder and even if the rest didn't work out for arsenal, I wish they could have found a way to put it into the Kiev 4am/4m line. Since the 85 lines are apparenty a very late addition to the camera, it would appear that this camera (7204507) must have been near the end.
So far, I'm pretty favorably impressed. I'll get a chance tomorrow afternoon (since I work in the AM) to take it out and do some shooting. I hope the weather will be sunny and warm (at least what passes for warm in Wisconsin in February!) and get the roll one hour dunked and scanned. With luck, in 24 hours I'll have some results to share.
William