wtl said:
Okay, seems everyone agreed that it's not a rangefinder.
My Rolleicord has a Tessar 75mm 3.5 lens on it. Are you saying that this lens is not the same to SOME of Rolleiflexs, though it bears the same brand? Understand some Rolleiflex has that faster 2.8 lens, but with 3.5 lens, are they the same?
To add spice to the broth...
Rolleicords were the 'budget' cameras (read: lower priced) intended for amateurs and serious photographers who couldn't and wouldn't pay the higher Rolleiflex pricetag nor care to have its extra features.
The Rolleicord was sold cheaper (but not made cheap) than the Rolleiflex because it had less of the 'automatic' features which the Rolleiflex had.
The Rolleicord did not have the crank advance (quicker to use) but instead used a knob. Film was advanced a bit more slowly, but this did not matter to the average amateur, but likely essential to the press or wedding photographer.
The Rolleicord did not have the automatic shutter cocking which the Rolleiflex had coupled with the film advance. Instead the 'cord used a cocking lever which was the same lever used to trip the shutter. The 'flex had a real button.
The Rolleicord didn't use the shutter and aperture knobs found in the Rolleiflex. Nor did the former had the coupled, LV-locking controls. After using these often uncooperative LV coupled controls, the separate levers which the Rolleicord used for shutter and apertures were probably not a bad idea after all.
The Rolleicord did not use a film 'feeler' to automatically detect the first frame. The Rolleiflex had the backing paper threaded through 'fingers' which 'felt' the changes in paper+film thickness and set off the frame counter and film positioning mechanism to work. The Rolleicord used the standard "match the arrows on the backing paper with the red dots on the film track" routine. The last of the Rolleiflex (model G?) eventually abandoned the feeler and used the positioning dots instead.
Both Rolleicord and Rolleiflex will shoot with the same quality if lenses are the same in both cameras. It would be hard to detect the differences in shot made with Tessars and Xenars. A Rolleicord is never a compromise in quality, it just doesn't have all the extras which the Rolleiflex had.
The Xenar is quite good- I've shot with this for a billboard a few years ago. The only lens which can be considered as a toy in the Rollei TLR arsenal is the"Triotar", but even this lens can be quite interesting to use.
And finally, Rolleiflex are really big cameras. Rolleicords are smaller and a bit lighter. I've no Rolleiflex of my own, and I like using my Rolleicord 1a with Triotar and IV with Xenar. If only 120 were more available here....
Jay