My Range Finder System
I am
a long time SLR user. I am still one. Around 2005 I ventured into range finder
system (rather than range finder photography, seems like I am far from it).
Well, Leica is too far away for me in dollar sense, even considering buying
second hand. Being a long time Rollei and Zeiss supporter, I bought myself
(with whatever excuses I could think of) a Rollei 35RF and 40mm Sonnar set.

Note: The camera strap adaptors shown in the photo are not original from Rollei 35 RF.
My
main reasons for getting into a range finder system are a few. Firstly need to
find some excuses to spend my savings. Next I have been eyeing at the better
performance of the wide angle lenses especially distortion control. Then I was
also looking at a smaller camera system in terms of size and weight as my age
is catching up, the whole battery of SLR equipment may one day be too heavy for
me.
Maybe
for the price I paid I should have bought a Voigtlander Bessa R2 instead.
Rollei 35RF is essentially a re-badged Bessa R2, both made by Cosina. Of course
the external appearance is different, but the mechanical layout are all the
same. Frame selection on the 35RF is for 40mm, 50mm and 80mm. Most of the other
range finder bodies offer a 35mm frame line. Range finder coupling for the 35RF
is closer at 0.8m than the R2 at 0.9m. The later Bessa and the Cosina-Zeiss
developed Zeiss Ikon are able to close focus to 0.7m. The 40mm Sonnar lens,
however, is provision to close focus to 0.7m.

I
have no complaints on the 35RF body. Good metallic feel. Fully mechanical. The
only thing is the shutter noise a bit loud and not very impressive :). The finder has enough space outside the
40mm frame line for me to frame for a 28mm lens, one of the main consideration
when I bought my ZM 28mm Biogon rather than getting the very well praised ZM
25mm Biogon.
I
have been using the 35RF with the trigger winder. I have actually never use the
trigger winder in its original design intent that is to take rapid shots at
approximately 3 frames per second. I prefer the size of the camera+trigger
winder for better gripping.
My first encounter with the Zeiss 40mm Sonnar was with this ever popular Rollei 35 S. The sweetness of the colour and the high resolution apparent of the lens character already atrracted me at that time.
I am
a safe shooter. I will almost always taking photos at shutter speed of 1/125 or
faster and use aperture setting optimum to the lens, generally 2 stops above
the largest f-stop. So for practical purposes I do not face much issue with
focusing accuracy with the shorter ranger finder base length. For tele lens and
even 50mm at f1.4 I still much prefer using SLR, which allows me to judge the
effect of depth of field. Also with SLR I do not need to focus and recompose as
I use full matt screen and therefore I can focus at anywhere I like. Especially
for taking kids at close range and I always like to focus on the eye nearer to
the camera.
If this body has flash TTL and a shutter quiet like
Leica M I guess it will then be an almost ideal body, short of a longer range
finder base length.

Teck Whye Singapore, Rollei 35RF, 40/2.8 HFT Sonnar, f4 1/250, Kodak UC100, 17 Sept 2006
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