KenR
Well-known
I bought an Zeiss Ercona from Certo6 earlier this year. Clean with all of the speeds working well. Seems fairly sharp at f/11-22, but obviously it is not the same as my FujiGSW690.
Watch out for a Zeiss Ikon Ercona I or II (made by east-german zeiss ikon Dresden). Many of them come with a Carl Zeiss Jena Tessar (razor sharp at f5.6/ f 8 !!!) f3.5/105mm lens and a tempor (east-german compur) shutter (with b-1/250th sec). You can get it for 25-50 € (30-60 $). Mine is a pure joy to shoot and sharp as hell 🙂
This essentially means stay away from old Kodak folders. Many were well built. Some had great lenses, but Kodak was particular about using their own proprietary film form. The spools were different from cameras that used conventional 120.
Kodaks used these odd spools and if you try to go with a Kodak (which explains their cheap cheap selling prices) you have to have a conversion done in the camera to 120, or respool 120 film onto 620 spools. The Kodak Medallist rangefinder camera is an example, as are all the Kodak Tourister. ???sp
Too bad, too... some good old Kodaks out there pretty useless.
Don't know what other cameras, if any, used the Kodak proprietary spools.
However I'm not sure how good is the film flatness of these 6x9 folders, since the film area is quite large and the pressure plate relatively weak.
There were other brands that I thought also initially jumped on the 620 band wagon for a short time, but I cannot remember which ones...
Agfa and Nagel, labeled for PB20 film. (Actually, I think they invented the stuff, but Kodak was the main user of it, as far as I have been able to find out the Nagel camera that became the Kodak Duo 620 was the first, but it was developed a couple of years before Kodak bought out Nagel.) Also, a lot of American snapshot cameras, especially the plastic ones from the 1950's, were 620.
I think I read in one of the threads here on RFF that Kodak created the 620 format in an attempt to lock up the MF format and squeeze others out of it.
Wasn't Nagle the German company Kodak coupled with for several of their cameras? Nagle produced some of their 9x12 cameras, such as the Recomar IIRC.
Lots of good info here, gentlemen. It looks like I'm going to go for a basic one in working condition, or bite the bullet and get one with a rangefinder.
So how hard is scale focusing, anyway?
That is the conventional wisdom. Actually, 620 & 616 were developed to make more compact cameras possible. Originally they were to hold 6 exposures but by the time they hit the market thinner film bases were available so they were able to put 8 exposures on the roll just like 120 & 116.
Nagel Works was bought by Kodak in 1933. It is the company that developed and manufactured Kodak Retina cameras. However, the camera that became the Kodak Duo 620 was brought out in 1931 by Nagelwerk, and was supposedly the first camera to use 620, Nagel worked in conjunction with Agfa to develop the smaller spool for it.
Dr. August Nagel was a co-founder of Zeiss Ikon, he left them and started his own company Nagelwerk in 1928. He was one of those very talented German camera engineers that so influenced the camera industry.
I got interested in all that, because Amelia Earhart supposedly carried a Kodak Duo 620 on her round the world flight. Nifty camera.
Pass on a 6x9 folder. I have a Moskva 5 and Bessa II. Neither of them can keep the film plane flat. Hence, the edges of all photos are out of focus. Get something newer that doesn't have this problem such as a Fuji 6x9 or the Bessa III 6x7. I have the Bessa III and it is terrific.