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在当地的一家古董店看见一台YASHICA MAT,觉得品相还不错,小时候就一直想要一个双镜头反光相机。回家研究了一下,好像还不错。过几天我再去看看。嘿嘿嘿……
Yashicamat: With the 4 elementYashinon lens (desingated Luxamor on early models), this camera is oneto look for. Aside from the better lens, the camera also automaticallycocks the shutter when the film is advanced, just like a Rolleiflex.The Copal shutter offers speeds from 1 sec to 1/500 plus B and MX flashsync. In all around value, the Yashicamat is probably the best in theline as it offers all the significant upgrades in lens and body, exceptfor 220 capability (which most photographers rarely use) and a built-inmeter.
Yashica-Mat A professional camera featuring quality optics, fully automatic crank action film transport.
Yashica-Mat. I'm told a few of the earliest examples had 3-element lenses, but all the ones I've seen have 4-element Yashinon lenses (Tessar formula). This is the same lens used on the D, the 635, and all later models. The Yashica-Mat is basically a Rollei copy, with a few of the more expensive features left out, but the ergonometrics left in. It actually appeared before the Model D and the 635, and I've heard that Rollei wanted to sue because the design was so close (don't know if that's really true, though) Crank wind, combined film wind-shutter cock, Rollei bayonet 1 mount for filters. Until I owned a Rollei, I thought there was little difference between this and a meterless Rollei. I was wrong. If you've owned both, you know-- there **is** a difference. But between the Yashica-Mat and the Rolleis with 3.5 Tessar or Xenar lenses, IMHO the difference is mostly in build quality and the neat little details, not in optical quality. Somebody moving up from 35mm should get better pictures from a properly adjusted Yashica-Mat than from just about any 35mm camera (keeping in mind the limitations ot a waist-level finder, fixed f3.5 80mm lens, etc.) |
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