Dante_Stella
Rex canum cattorumque
A couple of quick questions:
1. How compact is the Linhof Technorama 612 PC series? The body looks pretty small from front to back.
2. Is the 8mm pre-shift enough for most purposes with a 58mm lens?
Thanks,
Dante
1. How compact is the Linhof Technorama 612 PC series? The body looks pretty small from front to back.
2. Is the 8mm pre-shift enough for most purposes with a 58mm lens?
Thanks,
Dante
FrozenInTime
Well-known
The camera is difficult to describe as compact - it's bulkier than a Hasselblad, but smaller than a RB67. I can take a picture with a M6 for scale tomorrow.
The built in fixed shift is great for landscapes - also works well upside down as fall.
For architecture cropping to e.g. 6x9 from a vertical with the 58mm is more useful than the built in shift.
I'm on my second GAS pass with this camera ; owned one 10+ years ago with 58 and 135 lenses - only recently bought the same setup again.
The built in fixed shift is great for landscapes - also works well upside down as fall.
For architecture cropping to e.g. 6x9 from a vertical with the 58mm is more useful than the built in shift.
I'm on my second GAS pass with this camera ; owned one 10+ years ago with 58 and 135 lenses - only recently bought the same setup again.
fad gadget
Established
I just txt'd you a pic of mine, beside my monochrom.
FrozenInTime
Well-known
Linhof next to M6


giganova
Well-known
That'll be a killer camera for run & gun street photography! 
Emile de Leon
Well-known
For what it is..it is compact...at 6x12..
I would luv to have one..
But nowhere near as compact as a Brooks veriwide..at 6x10..
I would luv to have one..
But nowhere near as compact as a Brooks veriwide..at 6x10..
Dante_Stella
Rex canum cattorumque
Thanks guys! All of the pictures have been helpful. Right now, my quandary is between a Linhof with a 58 and a Horseman 612 with a 45.
- The Linhof is wider but flatter
- The Horseman is fatter but narrower (because the spools are behind the film plane)
The film path is obviously a question; I would have to imagine that the Linhof holds film flatter (because it's a straight path), but against that, the Horseman can interchange magazines and formats.
Frozenintime, how did you attach a filter to the viewfinder? Also, why yellow?
Dante
- The Linhof is wider but flatter
- The Horseman is fatter but narrower (because the spools are behind the film plane)
The film path is obviously a question; I would have to imagine that the Linhof holds film flatter (because it's a straight path), but against that, the Horseman can interchange magazines and formats.
Frozenintime, how did you attach a filter to the viewfinder? Also, why yellow?
Dante
Roger Hicks
Veteran
I'd back the Linhof as more reliable, though.For what it is..it is compact...at 6x12..
I would luv to have one..
But nowhere near as compact as a Brooks veriwide..at 6x10..
Cheers,
R.
FrozenInTime
Well-known
Frozenintime, how did you attach a filter to the viewfinder? Also, why yellow?
Dante
The previous owner had gone to the trouble of machining down a filter and epoxying it to the finder.
It's not a total success as it vignettes the 58mm view a bit when a filter is mounted on the ring; so my thoughts are now that it was done, not for pre-visualization, but to orientate a polarizer when using the 135mm.
Donald.
Emile de Leon
Well-known
Yeah Roger..mine was pretty reliable..until I was in a monestary in India..and it started skipping frames..I really should have it looked at..but I haven't shot it in years..but..its hardly bigger than a Leica M though...so just crop the top..and you have 6x12 proportions if needed..I'd back the Linhof as more reliable, though.
Cheers,
R.
Dante_Stella
Rex canum cattorumque
For what it is..it is compact...at 6x12..
I would luv to have one..
But nowhere near as compact as a Brooks veriwide..at 6x10..
Been there, done that. The transport is, to put it mildly, flaky, and the frames are 20mm shorter than a Horseman and 25mm shorter than a Linhof frame.
Dante
Roger Hicks
Veteran
At what point, though, do you decide to crop? A full-size "6x9" (at 56x84mm) can be cropped to 42x84mm and with the right camera/lens, the quality can be excellent.
I've also used a Horseman 6x12 back (which I still have) on an MPP Mk. VII (which I don't). The trouble with 6x12 and worse still 6x17 -- and I've used at least two examples of both, Linhof and A.N. Other in both cases -- is that the film gets used up very quickly.
And I keep idly fantasizing about a simple spacer: a 4x5 inch back (to take the Horseman) on one side and an Alpa lens panel on the other...
Cheers,
R.
I've also used a Horseman 6x12 back (which I still have) on an MPP Mk. VII (which I don't). The trouble with 6x12 and worse still 6x17 -- and I've used at least two examples of both, Linhof and A.N. Other in both cases -- is that the film gets used up very quickly.
And I keep idly fantasizing about a simple spacer: a 4x5 inch back (to take the Horseman) on one side and an Alpa lens panel on the other...
Cheers,
R.
winoto
Established
Hello
Anyone here know how to dismantle a technorama finder? I need to clean the inside of the front element but unable to find diagrams online. Have removed all 4 screws possible (2 holding the cold shoe attachment) and (2 holding the spirit lever) with no movement of the front or rear plates. Thanks in advance.
Anyone here know how to dismantle a technorama finder? I need to clean the inside of the front element but unable to find diagrams online. Have removed all 4 screws possible (2 holding the cold shoe attachment) and (2 holding the spirit lever) with no movement of the front or rear plates. Thanks in advance.
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