Yashica was my first TLR and although it worked, I was not impressed. Replaced by C220 and C330 and set of 4 lenses plus the shades. Not impressed either. That was a long time ago, 30 years at least.
I borrowed a 3.5 Rollie a few years ago. Those images were impressive. Same from a tele Rollie again borrowed. There is something about the German lenses. Japanese lenses look flat to me. It is in 35 mm also. I compared my Pentax and Leica systems. My wife can pick out the Leica prints in a blind test 100%.
On a budget, I would pop for the Rolliecord or save some and get the Rollieflex . I learned a long time ago, it is all about the lenses.
Very similar story and opinion on my side.
Had 124G as my first TLR.
Vent through C33 with two lenses. Owned Yashica A II S for fun shortly.
Got Lubitel-2 for even more fun (great for street photography, with scale focusing by quick finder).
Have two another 124G now. They designed very well, they looks nice. They are very advanced TLRs with exposure meters and bright screens. All three 124G I deal with have working Copals. The image is sharp and contrasty. All three have clean lenses.
If sharpness and contrast is only criterias for image quality 124G is the best for it under unbeatable price tag.... It is very sharp in the middle and very contrasty.
But I decided to try Rollei, just because of talks about it here and where.
Again, just for fun and to see how it "works inside" I purchased III with Xenar. Camera exterior - "very ugly", taking lens has separation. I have to get to the shutter and take slow speeds part out for service to make it works again. I have to clean mirror and focusing screen.
It is very primitive camera comparing to 124G, but have closer focusing distance and parallax correction.
I took one test roll of GP3 100 in it. Couple of quick test portraits to check flash with it and the rest of the roll for street portraits and candids at f5.6.
Lens suffers from sun to it. But it is my first TLR where I see the character of the lens...
Maybe it is due to separation defect
🙂