The Mamiya 6 MF permits use of 120 or 220 roll film for traditional 6 x 6cm square or 6 x 4.5cm ideal medium formats, or 24 x 54mm panoramic format using standard 35mm cassette film. Composition through the viewfinder is fast. Mamiya dropped the 35mm rangefinders around the mid 1960s, and the range of the Mamiya series at the end of the 1960s was formed by the Press, the Mamiya C and the 35mm SLRs. The RB67 Professional 6×7 SLR in 1970, the Mamiya M645 4.5×6 SLR in 1975 and the RZ67 Professional 6×7 SLR in 1982 confirmed Mamiya's orientation. Analysis sets & logic number. Mamiya-Sekor C 110mm f/2.8 Serial No. Batteries for the Mamiya M645 1000s. The Mamiya M645 uses one 6.2V silver-oxide. On July 6, 2015. If you spot it on eBay or elsewhere, please help! If you spot it on eBay or elsewhere, please help! To fill the gap between the normal 80 mm and the 210 mm, I procured a recent copy of the Mamiya-Sekor C 110 mm f/2.8 at auction on eBay. Number of employees. 200: Parent: Phase One. The lightweight 35 mm Mamiya NC1000, the 6×6 cm medium-format C series of interchangeable-lens twin-lens reflex. Ge universal remote 24912 manual.
:: Author Message dof Joined: 04 Feb 2009 Posts: 339 Location: Southern California Posted: Sat Dec 18, 2010 1:23 pm Post subject: Mamiya 6 folder dof wrote: I found a Mamiya 6 folding 6x6 RF camera at a camera show for $40. Shutter working and Zuiko 75/3.5 (4 element) lens in clean condition. Shutter speeds to 1/500. I will show more of the camera when I finish working on it. The main problem: a rather large hole in the bellows: I tried a new method of patching. On the inside I glued an oversize patch cut from black gaffer tape.
On the outside I applied many coats of a product called which I first thinned with naptha. I let each coat dry for about an hour before applying the next until it all looked fairly well blended in. The black Plasti-Dip matches the look of the bellows pretty well. You have to look pretty closely to see the patch. I used a small paint brush to apply it and also painted it on the frayed corners of the bellows which seemed to work well at sealing and strengthening them. I haven't tested with film yet (still working on some other areas) but it passes the flashlight test and folds properly and is flexible and strong.
The Mamiya 6 was made in a number of different versions. They are sturdy RF cameras with focusing by moving the film plane forward and back via a rear thumb wheel. This makes it much simpler to remove the lens groups for flood cleaning of the shutter if needed (not needed on this camera). Attila Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Posts: 58140 Location: Austria,Hungary. Expire: 2011-11-18 Posted: Sat Dec 18, 2010 4:38 pm Post subject: F16SUNSHINE wrote: Nice job Love to see a pic of the whole camera in this thread.
_________________ Moderator dof Joined: 04 Feb 2009 Posts: 339 Location: Southern California Posted: Sat Dec 18, 2010 8:43 pm Post subject: dof wrote: Here's the whole camera. I still have some cosmetic clean-up to do and replacement of cracked front VF cover glass and possibly rangefinder adjustment (though it appears OK so far). All mechanics are functional so I'm lucky there. I believe it is the Model IV of the series. Indigo renderer free for sketchup download. It has film plane focusing (a neat feature in itself), auto stop on each film frame, frame counter, double exposure prevention via red flag in viewfinder, Seikosha-Rapid shutter 1 - 1/500 + B, Zuiko 'F.C.' (?) 75mm/3.5 (4/3) lens, 10-blade diaphragm and flash sync post.