I recently picked up this Yashica Super 40 from Ebay for $40. I'd have to say, it's a very underrated camera, the lens is fairly wide (for Super 8) at 9mm on the wide end and has an OK zoom range of 4x with 36mm on the long end although I can't say I really use zoom in video at all. It's relatively bright at F/1.8 and does auto exposure for 25/40, 40/64, 64/100, 100/160, 160/250 film.
No 500 you say? But have you ever shot Vision 3 500T on 8mm? As far as I am concerned this is a set and forget 50 speed camera, with no real intention of ever shooting anything other than Vision 3 50D to get the most out of a thumbnail sized film frame.
I wanted to know whether it was working, so I went out, run and gun, with a friend, down to the beach to test it, and surprisingly after 55 years it works probably as well as it did when it was bought by the original owner. But then, most of these cameras haven't been used much at all over the last 30 years, so I wouldn't expect much less, provided the battery compartment was clean.
I would say this camera was a good investment, it does everything you need from a Super 8 camera from a set and forget perspective, and the metering is actually about as accurate as most people would consider 100% accurate. I asked Richard to give me an over scan with this scan so I could take a look at the entire film frame, it looks relatively clean to me. I don't know of any Super 8 camera that has a 100% clean gate.
Richard's 2.5K scans are 4:3 ratio, but that's OK with me. The footage stays with the tradition of what Super 8 is. Super 8 was never intended to be viewed in 16:9 or to be a 16:9 film stock. You can crop it anamorphically, but on such a small frame it's just a waste of film.
No 500 you say? But have you ever shot Vision 3 500T on 8mm? As far as I am concerned this is a set and forget 50 speed camera, with no real intention of ever shooting anything other than Vision 3 50D to get the most out of a thumbnail sized film frame.
I wanted to know whether it was working, so I went out, run and gun, with a friend, down to the beach to test it, and surprisingly after 55 years it works probably as well as it did when it was bought by the original owner. But then, most of these cameras haven't been used much at all over the last 30 years, so I wouldn't expect much less, provided the battery compartment was clean.
I would say this camera was a good investment, it does everything you need from a Super 8 camera from a set and forget perspective, and the metering is actually about as accurate as most people would consider 100% accurate. I asked Richard to give me an over scan with this scan so I could take a look at the entire film frame, it looks relatively clean to me. I don't know of any Super 8 camera that has a 100% clean gate.
Richard's 2.5K scans are 4:3 ratio, but that's OK with me. The footage stays with the tradition of what Super 8 is. Super 8 was never intended to be viewed in 16:9 or to be a 16:9 film stock. You can crop it anamorphically, but on such a small frame it's just a waste of film.
Comment