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Mamiya 645AFD (2001) — added communication interface for digital backs; Mamiya 645AFD II (2005) — minor updates to the 645AFD; Mamiya 645AFD III (Phase One 645AF) (2008) — minor updates to the 645AFD II; Mamiya 645DF (Phase One 645DF) (2009) — digital-only (no film backs) supports Leaf shutter lenses, vertical grip and user firmware ...
The Mamiya C330 Professional is a traditional film twin-lens reflex camera [1] introduced in the 1970s for the professional and advanced amateur photography markets. This model was 340 grams lighter than the previous model C33, which weighed 2040 grams (with 80 mm lens).
The imaging technology used in this camera is also available as a separate digital back, the ZD Back, which can be used with Mamiya's film cameras. Shortly after the product was announced, the company was sold. Pentax, for whose cameras digital backs are not available, sells a medium-format digital camera.
At the same time, Mamiya also announced a ZD back which had the same specification but was intended to be used with the Mamiya 645AFDII / AFDIII. The ZD back was even more delayed and, once it was introduced, it was already outdated. In 2009, the Mamiya M Series digital backs were released (M18, M22 and M31) all featuring high pixel counts with ...
In 1991, Leaf introduced the first medium format digital camera back, the Leaf DCB1, nicknamed ‘The Brick’, which had a resolution of 4 million pixels (4 megapixels). As of 2012, Leaf produces the Credo line of digital camera backs, ranging from 40 to 80 megapixels. Until 2010, Leaf also produced photography workflow software Leaf Capture.
By Gram Slattery. WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said he expects Elon Musk to find hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud and abuse at the Pentagon during an audit that the ...
Better Light, Inc. was an American company that manufactured digital backs for large format film cameras. It was based in San Carlos, California. [1] [2]The Better Light scan back was a device designed to make it possible to capture digital photographs using traditional 4x5 large format film view cameras, copy stands, and microscopes by replacing the 4x5 film holders that they used.
Bosses are posting ‘ghost jobs’ that don’t exist. Here are 3 ways to spot a listing that isn’t real