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Last Spring, Bronica sent me a big Pelican case containing an entire Bronica RF645 kit.
At the time, I promised a follow-up to my "first impression" that was then
circulating on the internet.
Right now, until March, Bronica is offering a whopping $450 rebate on this already
pretty inexpensive camera, so now seems as good a time as any to revisit the unique,
unusual RF645.
(Word to the wise: don't stop reading too soon.)
First Things First
There's no getting around this. The RF645, the first all-new Bronica since the
medium-format manufacturer's acquisition by the independent lensmaking giant Tamron, has
been something very close to a fiasco.
There are three basic problems. Namely, the lenses, the lenses, and the lenses. This is
probably a bit embarrassing to Tamron, since lensmaking is the company's forté. Not that
Bronica is any slouch in the optics department, either.
The three problems with the lenses, listed from leastest to mostest, are 3. There are
only three, 2. The fastest is only f/4, and 1. Ahhh, ahem, well, yes, this is the biggie
Bronica consistently promised a 135mm telephoto for a long period of time
surrounding the camera's release, and then bailed.
That's right, they bagged it. Actually, a number of 135mm lenses were made, but
evidently Bronica then discovered that the RF645's rangefinder baselength was not
sufficient for the longer lens to be focused accurately without individual camera-to-lens
calibration, so, rather than cope with the Pandora's box of hassles that that would have
created, they stopped production of the 135mm and, as quickly as they could scramble,
ramped up to make a 100mm instead. As far as I know, most of the stock of 135mm lenses was
bought up by retailer Robert White in England
and from what I hear, Robert White won't sell one to you unless you
agree to have your camera body calibrated for the lens.
Embarrassing. To say the least.
Shoppers have duly spanked Bronica-Tamron for all this. The what-about-the-135
imbroglio has been enough to turn the brand-new camera into a decided "also ran"
for the majority of potential medium-format purchasers. 100mm just doesn't stack up very
well to the competition, even when we're only talking about the rangefinder competition.
Next, considering that the Leica and Cosina-Voigtlander rangefinders' stocks-in-trade
are fast lenses for low-light work, the Bronica's fastest lens speed of f/4 is...well,
let's just call it "underwhelming." As in limiting. As in, it's gonna be a
problem.
As in, slap your forehead and say, "I coulda had a two-eight!"
Finally, for
an interchangeable-lens camera, the greatest strength of which is that you can, um, change
lenses, having a whopping three choices at your disposal, while better than having just
one lens superglued permanently to one body, is, well, not that much better than
having just one lens superglued permanently to one body.
The lenses available are a 45mm, the 65mm normal that comes with the kit, and that
shamefaced stop-gap 100mm (which turns out to be a nice portrait lens, but we'll get to
that). The 35mm equivalents would be 29mm, 42mm, and 65mm, calculated from the long
dimension of the format. Adequate, thanks, but nothing to set the world on fire.
What has all this meant? Well, it's meant that most potential buyers, being the
conservative, wise comparative shoppers that we all know we are, have for the most part
said thanks but no thanks. Which has led to, er, disappointing sales (I'm being very
mature not to employ a more hyperbolic term like "catastrophic" here, don't you
agree?). Which has led to the nice, fat $450 rebate that's currently in force. Which has
brought the price of the "kit" consisting of the camera body and normal lens
down to $1150. Maybe even less, depending on your shopping skills and how much persistence
you can muster.
Second Things Next
The irony of all this (and it's a rather considerable irony) is that the Bronica RF645
is just a super camera. It's incredibly easy to use, quiet, very comfortable, portable,
ergonomic as hell, and yields spectacular results with pretty much a minimum of fuss.
That slow little 65mm normal lens turns out to be a fabulous performer, a downright
pretty lens. Ordinarily, lenses that are super-sharp tend to have rather jarring and ugly
"bokeh" (out-of-focus blur). Lenses that have nice, soft, coherent blur are
often not quite as sharp in the plane of focus, or else they don't yield that nice soft
blur until they're stopped down. The Bronica's "orthometer type" normal lens
gives you the best of both worlds. You can argue all you want about which 35mm lens is
sharpest, but this modest little 65mm paired with its nice big neg blows 35mm right into
the tall grass. Comparing the two is like a race between a really fast sprinter and...a
horse.
This does go part of the way towards making up for that slooooow f/4 maximum aperture.
If you're only satisfied with ISO 100 film in 35mm, for instance, you can get
as-good-or-better quality with ISO 400 film in the Bronica. That doesn't entirely
make up for the slow aperture, of course, but it takes some of the sting out.
I can't resist offering kudos for the nifty lens shades, too. I love 'em.
The camera's native vertical format is another big consideration. It takes about seven
minutes to get used to. People whose shooting mostly runs to "landscape"
(horizontal) orientation, or who don't have seven minutes to spare, will want to be
careful. Most people, though, will just notice that the viewfinder is large and bright and
easy to see, with a good rangefinder patch that allows even those of us with middle-age
eyesight to focus accurately with no trouble. Some people like, and some dislike, the way
the bright viewfinder information is tucked considerately off to the side. I like it; I
don't want to be distracted by a bunch of numerals when I'm concentrating on what's inside
the framelines. Your taste may run the other way. Easy enough to see for yourself. Well,
what the heck, now is as good a time as any to make this basic point:. fact is, as with
the viewfinder info, the vertical frame orientation, and the lack of a long lens,
virtually all of the Bronica RF645's potential drawbacks and negative points are served
right up in plain view. Yup, there are only a few lenses; yeah, they promised and promised
a longer tele, and then welched like big dogs; the orientation is vertical; the normal
lens is dead normal, i.e., a little shorter than most medium-format normals; and so on
down the list. The camera's only real oddity, the little self-cocking wheezing noise it
makes when you release the shutter, is also hard to miss prior to purchase. (Incidentally,
although that little wheeze makes it seem like there's some shutter lag, there really
isn't much. The shutter fires promptly, followed by the lion's share of the release noise
shortly thereafter. Lag isn't really bad at all.) Summing up, I don't think there's a
single thing lurking in the shadows waiting to bite you on the tush somewhere on down the
ownership road.
All the camera's hidden or less obvious features, synergies, and intangibles, on the
other hand, every one, turn out to be good things. Unlike many medium-format cameras, the
RF645 doesn't feel like it was designed somewhere far back in the mists of time by little
European guys who have long since gone to the Great Workshop in the clouds. It's very
nicely built utilitarian, not precious, but good and solid. The controls are as
well thought out as you'll find on any camera. It's easy to see what you're taking
pictures of. The meter is the business, and the control the camera gives you over exposure
is considerable. It's virtually as easy to use as a 35mm camera, if not more so, so
straightforward and user-friendly is it. Heck, one buyer on photographyreview.com reports
using it successfully as a point-and-shoot. And the results will float your boat for the
duration of your association with it, pretty much guaranteed. If you can't take dazzlingly
sharp and gorgeous pictures with this thing that will make the neighbors and the in-laws
ooh and ahh, well, Bub, you just need to give it up and get into another hobby.
'By all that's good and glorious take this counsel'
So having lived with it, would I recommend it? Depends, depends. Assuming you can live
with all the evident setup and system limitations let's say, you ordinarily take
pictures in plenty of light, such as outside, you like a slightly wide lens, you don't
need extreme secondary focal lengths, and you are willing to get used to (or even like)
the unusual vertical orientation and the odd, endearing little mouse-whimper noise the
shutter makes assuming all those things well then, it's perfect. Honest.
Well, damn close.
Would I recommend it as an only camera? No, I don't think so. Too limited in
low light. Would I recommend it as a first camera for someone making their maiden sortie
into medium format? Hmm. Maybe. But...probably not. It would most likely give folks like
that some weird ideas about what medium format's all about. Would I recommend it as a
first rangefinder? There, I don't see any problem. This camera is as good as any at
demonstrating rangefinder advantages, and, er, a bit better than most at demonstrating
rangefinder limitations.
But would I recommend it as a second or third camera, especially to someone who's
already familiar with operating a rangefinder? You betcha. To someone who shoots with a
bigger 645 SLR rig as their main box? A no-brainer. To someone who shoots 35mm but wants
medium-format quality waiting in the wings? Oh yeah. To black-and-white photographers who
want big negs and a sleeper of an excellent lens for fine-printmaking purposes?
Absolutely. As long as you don't need to depend on it for everything, and you're looking
for a walking-around camera that's portable, easy and fun to use, and capable of results
that can rival or surpass the best, you'll probably really like it. The kicker (and it's a
big, meaty, haul-off-and-whack-'em-in-the-arse kicker, too) is the current rebate, which
takes the body / lens kit from being a solid bargain to being a spectacular one. For
$1,150, we're just taking Tamron to the bank, that's all there is to that. No two ways
about it, this is a hell of a lot of camera and lens for that price. Unless I'm messing up
my research somehow, a Leica 35mm Summicron ASPH costs $1,495, and a Hasselblad 80mm f/2.8
CFE lens costs $1,875. Meaning, you'd spend considerably more for either lens and still be
short a camera.
As for the Mamiya 7, another camera I like, yeah, you'll probably want to think about
that. But, again, the Mamiya's equally slow normal lens costs a good C-note more than the
whole Bronica kit'n'caboodle does. (At least here in der Homeland.) Bronica sells you a
nifty lens and helpfully throws in the camera for free, you might say. Old sayings about
looking gift horses in the mouth leap to mind.
Since I mentioned the Mamiya 7, a short digression on 645 may be in order: 6x7 is a
great format, make no mistake about that. But I've always seen 645 as being a perfect
compromise for exactly the kind of shooting this particular rangefinder is best at. It's
significantly bigger than 35mm, amounting, as it does, to a cropped 6x6, which I always
crop anyway. Plus, the sixteen shots per roll compared to 6x7's measly ten, the fact that
the whole roll fits nicely on a contact sheet, the fact that the contacts are big enough
to "read" without further enlargement, and the fact that the negative is still
small enough to use relatively short focal length lenses on the camera and relatively
affordable and available enlarging setups, has always seemed like a complete package of
ideal compromises to my mind.
Oh, and about that 100mm lens, the one that came late to the party after all the fuss?
Turns out, it makes a perfectly useful counterpart to the moderately wide normal lens. It
scrubs off any hint of wideness, and is perfectly useful for relaxed (as opposed to tight)
portraits. Just what you need. Given that a rangefinder is really not the tool for teles
in the first place, this solution works fine, I think. Look, let's face it, you're not
going to be tromping through the woods shooting warblers and chickadees with this thing
anyway. Like most aspects of the RF645, the 100mm lens is better in practice than it is on
paper.
So: not the camera for always, or every day. However, I enjoyed my time with the RF645,
and came away with a real admiration for it. Should you feel any impulse to add it to your
arsenal, I hereby place my bets that you are unlikely to be sorry once you've spent some
quality time with an RF645 in your hands. Warmly recommended, the obvious caveats aside.
Mike Johnston
SMP Book of the Week
William Eggleston's Guide,
photographs by William Eggleston, Essay by John Szarkowski.
2002, Museum of Modern Art (Distributed Art Publishers), ISBN 0870703781.
This week I'm going to renew the recommendation that I talked about in my column "Collecting Photography
Books" two weeks ago. Simply put, this is a landmark book, an important volume in
the history of 20th Century photography. It's long been out of print, available only on
the used market for hundreds and hundreds of dollars. Right now you have a short
"window" of time to purchase the reprint for a measly $25. Anyone who has
ambitions of building a photography book collection should purchase this book ASAP.
Content: A/C (some people love it, some people don't; either way , it doesn't change the
rating, below).
Reproduction quality: B
Presentation: B+
Bookcraft: B
Synergy and intangibles: A
Overall Rating:
In a couple of weeks, I'll have a page up that will explain the gradings and the
overall rating in specific terms. The overall rating, however, is primarily a BUY
RECOMMENDATION for the specific edition under review. The highest rating, five stars,
which I promise will not be tossed around with abandon, means that a book is
urgently recommended for purchase. Don't hesitate; buy it while you can.
You can obtain William Egglestion's Guide from
Amazon.com