Harlequin565
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 8,684
- Name
- Ian
- Edit My Images
- No
OK. Premise: https://imback.eu/home/product/ibp-new-im-back-mf/
tl;dr: Digital back for [certain] medium format film cameras. Using a Sony micro 4/3 sensor (!?!?!). Cost 449CHF+Adapter (roughly another 200CHF) = £580ish
Looks like the adapter + back almost triple the length of a standard 6x6 body, so it looks like 2 backs on your camera instead of one. No pics of it on a Pentax 67 presumably because it would look ridiculous, like it does on the Yashica. On the Hasselblad it goes back so far your chest would get in the way of the viewfinder. Some ladies would have to stand to the side.
The 'how it works' blurb looks like it was formatted for 90s internet by someone who didn't know how to make paragraphs... Made my eyes sore reading it.
I want to dismiss it out of hand. It looks dodgy, unwieldy, impractical, expensive for what it is and whilst it's a solution to using a digital back on your film camera, it's the wackiest I've seen in a long while. But I have to admire the determination to bring it to market.
It's crazy right?
tl;dr: Digital back for [certain] medium format film cameras. Using a Sony micro 4/3 sensor (!?!?!). Cost 449CHF+Adapter (roughly another 200CHF) = £580ish
Looks like the adapter + back almost triple the length of a standard 6x6 body, so it looks like 2 backs on your camera instead of one. No pics of it on a Pentax 67 presumably because it would look ridiculous, like it does on the Yashica. On the Hasselblad it goes back so far your chest would get in the way of the viewfinder. Some ladies would have to stand to the side.
The 'how it works' blurb looks like it was formatted for 90s internet by someone who didn't know how to make paragraphs... Made my eyes sore reading it.
I want to dismiss it out of hand. It looks dodgy, unwieldy, impractical, expensive for what it is and whilst it's a solution to using a digital back on your film camera, it's the wackiest I've seen in a long while. But I have to admire the determination to bring it to market.
It's crazy right?
