In the candid photo the camera is in the upright position and close-up, with the innermost telephoto frame line switched off. Therefore, in the aircraft picture shown (at infinity focus) the camera is being held sideways. The finder is vertically oriented and not horizontally switchable. Red warning signals appear in the finder frame lines when one focuses closer than the field is accurately indicated.
![linhof technika iv cam linhof technika iv cam](https://www.bhphotovideo.com/images/images1500x1500/Linhof_000130_4x5_Master_Technika_3000_483973.jpg)
The rangefinder focuses as close as 32" and the frame lines are corrected for parallax and field reduction to 4 ft with wide angle and normal lenses, and 6.5 ft with the 180mm telephoto lens. "Type 1" cameras were made with 65/100/180mm frame lines, "Type 2" cameras had 53/80/180mm frame lines, and "Type 3" cameras had 53/100/180mm frame lines. The highlight of the Technika 70 is the integrated range/viewfinder which shows 6x7cm frame lines for three rangefinder-coupled lenses. Photos © 2004, Rick Shimonkevitz, All Rights Reserved The Technika 70 viewfinder, from International Photo Technik 1/1963. Superbly crafted, the Technika 70 was manufactured until '79 and replaced by the 2x3 Super Technika V which, with its side-mounted rangefinder, resembles a "baby" version of the 4x5" Super Technika cameras. A system camera, 6x7cm rollfilm backs, sheet film holders, Polaroid backs, and a number of focusing accessories were available. The revolving four-way articulating back was retained from the earlier models, as were front rise and the drop bed to allow use of wide angle lenses. The front standard was new, introducing on-axis tilt and lateral shift. An uncoupled selenium meter was built-in. The lens-coupling cam had a ratcheted mechanism allowing faster lens switching. For the Technika 70, the top-mounted rangefinder was a completely new design with a larger, brighter finder having 6x7cm format reflected frame lines for up to three rangefinder-coupled lenses. Introduced in 1963 by Nikolaus Karpf KG in Munich, Germany, the Technika 70 was similar in concept (combined range/viewfinder focusing, folding-bed bellows camera of alloy metal construction) to the previous Super Technika's III and IV. 100mm, 101mm, 4″ Focus Cam for Linhof Technika IV $36.A "universal" camera intended for both handheld action and tripod-mounted corrective photography, the Linhof Technika 70 is a combination of press and technical designs.105mm, 110mm Focus Cam for Linhof Technika IV $37.00 3d Print this.135mm Focus Cam for Linhof Technika IV $43.00 3d Print this.72mm, 75mm, 80mm Focus Cam for Linhof Technika IV $34.00 3d Print this.On demand printing and delivery of this item is provided by Shapeways.Ĭalibrating Technika Cams, part 2 Related products This cam is available marked for 90mm and 3 1/2” to match the markings on your lens.Īvailable in Aluminum or Bronze. If you prefer to use the camera as Linhof intended, select my version of this cam for dropped bed. The advantage of using the level bed is that it is quicker to set up the camera and be ready to shoot. A small amount of shift will overcome this.
![linhof technika iv cam linhof technika iv cam](https://live.staticflickr.com/6049/6293856742_1cd9b42752_b.jpg)
![linhof technika iv cam linhof technika iv cam](https://linhof.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Linhof_000054_MasterTechnika_classic2.jpg)
This will work fine for landscape images, but will cause the bed to protrude into the bottom of the image with portrait orientation. This version is intended to be used with the focus bed at 90 degrees. Follow this tutorial to calibrate the cam.
![linhof technika iv cam linhof technika iv cam](https://collectiblend.com/Cameras/images/Linhof-Technika-IV.jpg)
The leading edge will need to be filed down to calibrate a specific 90mm lens. Focus cam will fit on 4×5 Linhof Technika IV, V and Master models.