Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Kodak Retina II


Late 40s type 014, the lens scale is metric so it is a European version  Made by Kodak AG in Stuttgart, equipped with a coated Schneider-Kreuznach Xenon 50mm, f2 lens in a Compur Rapid shutter - B, T 1-1/500. Knob wind and manual shutter cocking but equipped with double exposure prevention mechanism. Well designed, built to high standards and very compact. The combined VF/RF moves to compensate for parallax, just wish it was brighter.

Kodak TX400, 60 minutes in Rodinal 1:100

The look of this lens reminds me of an early 50s Leitz Summitar.

Flexaret IIa


Made by Meopta in the early 50s in Czechoslovakia. Prontor SV shutter - T, B, 1-1/300, Mirar II 80mm, f3.5 lens, a four element Tessar formula.  Initially the 1-1/10 shutter speeds were not functioning but was brought back to life by a dose of Naphtha, judicious use of a blower + shutter exercise. Basic TLR - red window frame counter + manual shutter cocking = no double exposure prevention. The viewfinder is not as bright as the Fresnel equipped Yashica-Mat but comparable to the Rolleicord III. A very capable picture taker.

Foma 100, 60 minutes in Rodinal 1:100

Monday, February 27, 2012

Agfa Isolette II

The Apotar 85mm, f4.5 is the middle range 3 element lens offering from Agfa. It fits between the cheaper Agnar and the deluxe 4 element Solinar.
Luckily the basic 4 speed + B Prontor shutter is working fine on my sample. But the focus ring was frozen by the dreaded green dried grease which practically cemented the front cell focusing element to the middle lens element ;(

I backed off the 3 set screws just enough and the front focusing ring unmounted without fuss. No need to remove the tiny screws, not easy to remount and there's a greater chance of losing them. Replacement screws of this kind are not easy to find.
Before attempting to remove the front lens assembly, I applied a few drops of Naphtha (lighter fluid) around where the middle element screws into the shutter lens mount and let it sit for 15-20 minutes.
Then I wrapped the front lens element ring with duct tape and then tightened a hose clamp around it. Note: judicious care should be observed in the tension of the clamp - just enough to grip and gain leverage! Beyond that, one runs the risk of cracking the lens elements.

Once the two fused elements were out of the the shutter assembly, I soaked them in Naphtha contained in a 35mm film canister and exposed under the sun for 1 hour. After an hour and a bit of coaxing by hand, the two elements dislodged from each other. As pictured above, all the dried green stuff have to be cleaned out and then the threads re lubricated with lithium grease.

Collimating the lens
Camera mounted on a tripod, shutter held at B, 
in lieu of ground glass at the film plane I used three strips of magic tape, targeted distant objects 500 meters and beyond, focused the front lens element for maximum sharpness magnified through a viewing loupe.
Next time I will try Rick Oleson's two camera method.

Remount the front focusing ring at the infinity mark.

So far, so good but was anxious to shoot and forgot to inspect the bellows extensively for light leaks.
Leaky bellows is another Isolette affliction ;(

After seeing frames with symptoms of light leaks, I went into a dark room at night and shined a flashlight through the back and bellows of the Isolette. Found a few pinholes at the corners of the folds and a missing tiny screw on the side of the lens assembly was letting light through also. A replacement screw was found in my junk box. I used textile paint to seal the light leaks as a temporary fix. I reckon that with constant folding and unfolding, the textile paint fix will not hold. So I contacted Sandeha Lynch for replacement bellows.

Stay tuned...


Sunday, February 26, 2012

Rolleicord III

Getting my feet wet in medium format
Schneider-Kreuznach 75mm, f3.5 lens

It seems like the camera has not been used in a while because initially the slow speeds were sticky but came back to life with a bit of exercise. The finder was still not very bright for indoors after cleaning, but fine for outdoor shooting.

So far I've shot two rolls with this camera. Although the film transport has an auto stop feature, I'm still struggling to avoid double exposures ;)

Sample shot
Fuji Acros 120 - 60 minutes in Rodinal 1:100


Friday, February 10, 2012

Stand Development using Rodinal 1:100 @ 60 minutes

First attempt, semi stand - mild agitation for 30 seconds + 10 seconds @ 5 minutes then 3 gentle inversions at 30 minutes
Zorki 6 + Jupiter
Agfa APX100 @ EI100 
Second try - 3 minutes pre-wash, 1st minute gentle agitation then stand for 59 minutes
Olympus Trip 35
ERA 100 @ EI 50
Starting developer temperature in both = 15C, no tempering bath, ambient room temperature @ 23C

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Winter...

Zorki 1e + Industar 22
APX100/Diafine
Leica II + Summar 50/2
APX100/Diafine

I don't miss shoveling snow to drive to a gig...but beginning to miss cool and dry weather ;)