Rangefinder Camera

A rangefinder camera is one with a rangefinder that allows the photographer to judge the focusing distance. The rangefinder shows a double image, and aligning the two images of the object focused on gauges its distance. Older cameras may display the focusing distance and require the photographer to transfer the value to the lens focusing ring. Most recent designs are coupled rangefinders - that is, the focus is adjusted both in the rangefinder and in the lens by the same control, usually a ring on the lens. In older designs the rangefinder is separate from the viewfinder; in most newer ones it appears at the center of the viewfinder.

History

The first rangefinder (and the name "Range Finder") was invented by Morris Schwartz and sold by his company Kalart. It was designed as an add-on to the Graflex Speed Graphic press camera: you could either send in your own Speed Graphic for modification, or send the cost of a new Speed Graphic in addition to the cost of the Range Finder and Kalart would buy the camera, add the Range Finder and ship it back to you. (Schwartz also invented several other important photographic devices, including the first flash synchronizer and a system for focussing a camera in the dark which worked on the same principle as the rangefinder.) Rangefinder cameras were common from the 1930s to the 1970s, but the more advanced models lost ground to single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras. The most famous rangefinder cameras take 35mm film, employ focal plane shutters, and have interchangeable lenses. These are Leica screwmount cameras (which gave rise to many imitations and derivatives), Zeiss Contax cameras (copied and then developed as the Ukrainian Kiev), Nikon S-series cameras (inspired by the Contax), and Leica M-series cameras. Other such cameras include the Casca (Steinheil, West Germany, 1948), Detrola 400 (USA, 1940–41), Ektra (Kodak, USA, 1941–8), Foca (OPL, France, 1947–63), Foton (Bell & Howell, USA, 1948), Opema II (Meopta, Czechoslovakia, 1955–60), Perfex (USA, 1938–49), Robot Royal (Robot-Berning, West Germany, 1955–76), and Witness (Ilford, Britain, 1953). Among the longer lasting marques, all but the Leica M succumbed in the marketplace to pressure from SLRs. The most recent in the M-series are the M7, the first of the series to feature automatic exposure; and the all-mechanical MP, an updated M6 with an M3-style rewind knob. Such cameras are greatly outnumbered by lens-shutter rangefinder cameras. These were made by many companies; merely among Japanese companies that still (2005) produce cameras, Canon, Fuji, Konica, Mamiya, Minolta, Olympus and Ricoh made 35mm cameras of this type. These camera were often designed to be compact, and eventually failed to compete with newer compact autofocus cameras. There has been something of a revival of rangefinder cameras in the 1990s. Aside from the Leica M-series, current models include the Konica RF, Voigtlnder Bessa R2a and R3a, and Hasselblad Xpan; Zeiss has also announced a new model called the Zeiss Ikon, made by Cosina. Cameras from the former Soviet Union - the Zorki and FED, based on the screwmount Leica, and the Kiev, based on the Contax rangefinder - are plentiful in the used market. There are also medium-format rangefinder cameras, like the Mamiya 7, the Bronica RF645 and the Fuji G-series. The Graflex Speed Graphic is a famous large-format rangefinder very popular with journalists during the 1940s. Digital imaging technology came to the rangefinder in 2004 with the introduction of the Epson RD-1 digital rangefinder camera. Manufactured by Cosina, which also builds the current Voigtlnder cameras, the RD-1 uses Leica M-mount lenses or earlier Leica screw mount lenses with an adapter.

Pros and Cons

SLRs are usually more technically advanced than rangefinder cameras, with more system options, and have the advantage that the image is seen through the same lens through which it is photographed. Since the user looks through a viewfinder some distance from the lens and sees an image that is slightly different from the image which will be recorded on the film, framing becomes inaccurate at close range (parallax problem). However, more advanced rangefinder cameras project a frameline into the viewfinder which corrects parallax error at all but very close imaging distances. For close-up photography, the rangefinder camera is awkward to use, as the image recorded may be significantly different from what the viewer sees. Variable zoom lenses are not available for rangefinder cameras, though a very few lenses such as the Leica Tri-Elmar or Konica Dual-Hexanon let the user select among two or three focal lengths. Rangefinder cameras do have several advantages over SLRs in certain applications. Since there is no moving mirror, as used in SLRs, the shutter response is faster and quieter and there is no momentary blackout; also, the camera's body is slimmer and less obtrusive. The lack of a mirror also allows lenses to project deep into the camera body, and so high quality wide-angle lenses are easier to design. (The Voigtlnder 12mm lens is the widest-angle rectilinear lens in general production.) In general, lenses are smaller than their SLR equivalents. Rangefinder focusing is more accurate with standard and wide-angle lenses (whereas an SLR is more accurate with telephoto lenses). These qualities make rangefinders ideal for action-grabbing candid shots and street photography.

External Links

The following are some external links to sites with more information on specific rangefinder cameras.

 

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