Feb 01, 2012 A jack of all trades and a master of one: Mamiya C330 vs. Rolleiflex 2.8E (Updated 2/1/2012). Mamiya offered a line of beautiful lenses and accessories to compliment it. A number of advanced features were built into the camera such as parallax adjustments, a “flappy” door that makes the camera light-tight when changing lenses mid-roll.
Car mechanic simulator 2019 user mods. Says:I have an opportunity to purchase a Mamiya C330 with an 80mm and 180mm lens, a couple of filters, a stroboframe handle AND 13 rolls of film for $250.I have two questions:Is this a good deal?andI currently own an Autocord, a Yashica-Mat, and a Yashica-EM (all CLA'd by Hama); would a C330 be a huge upgrade over any of these three?Thank you in advance!4:01PM, 4 November 2008 PDTsays:as long it's in fair condition, sounds like a great deal to me.
Serial number ranges for anything Mamiya are difficult to get. There are rumours and unanswered inquiries to Mamiya, but that's about all I was ever able to find. Mamiya is doing great job in publishing the manuals for free but when it comes to providing specialized technical information (ser #, type of coating and so on) they are a wall of silence. They won't even confirm or deny that D330 is in development.If you are going for C220, C220f is probably your best shot. It has the latest version of Mamiya TLR focusing screen (same as C330s, significantly brighter than C330 and C330f and not covered by some plastic that likes to flare). The film transport is by a knob which is not as fast as the crank but more robust.) I will probably get one as a backup for my C330s.