A short review of the Olympus 35 DC rangefinder


raytoei

Senior Member
Hi, this is a short review of the Olympus 35 DC rangefinder
used as travel camera. I ordered from a ebay seller and
within a week it arrived at my doorstep.

This RF is an interesting camera, it is Auto-Exposure but manual
focusing RF. The Aperture and Shutterspeed is automatically
selected and the only "manual" setting is the RF focusing.

I wanted to test its usage as a travel camera. Currently my go to
travel cameras are the Oly XA as well as the Minox Camera which are
Aperture Priority, and RF as well as scale (distance) focused.

The 35DC looks like its more powerful sibling, the 35RD which shares
a similar body and a very nice zuiko 40/f1.7 lens, aperture is the same
from 1.7 to f16, however the shutter speed is between 1/15 to 1/500s.
Unlike the more expensive RD, there is no way to select the Shutter or
Aperture. You just basically point, focus and shoot.

The DC comes with a Back Lit Compensation button which comes in handy where
there is a back-lit situation and you want the foreground not to be darkened
by the AE, the BLC button compensates by 1.5 stops.

In the viewer, the AE needle displays the Shutter speed and Aperture in a pair, ie.
500/f16 ~ 15/f1.7. It does not move independently, ie. 500/f1.7. This is quite
unusual, but works quite well.

There is a AE lock if the light is darker than 1/15 and f1.7. There isn't an easy workaround
for night scenery or bulb usage. For those situations, the only solution is to
use a flash. One method i used was to point the camera at a light source, get it
to the darkest usable AE ie. 1/15, and f1.7, half-press the shutter and re-compose
into the dark scenary, this meant that the images would be underexposed which
was okay most of the time.

There is no DOF scale which meant that I could not hyper focus, however the
lens has a short-throw, and focusing is very easy, though not always successful.
The AE makes shooting quite easy as you do not spend time setting aperture or
shutter speed, just focus and shoot (assuming the scenary isn't too dark).

I brought the camera on a business trip, shot 3 rolls and found around 32 images
worth keeping. This is actually quite a good hit considering a first time usage of
this camera. To make avail light shooting easier, I set the ISO to the max, which is
iso 800 when using the 400 Neopan film.

Pluses:
=====
+ Small and compact, great lens at f1.7 which produces sharp images
+ RF Focusing and Auto Exposure settings.
+ I love the combination of this camera with Fuji Neopan 400 at iso 800 and
developed at Fotohub which uses D76. The grains is quite nice and unlike
anything seen from a digital camera.

Quirks
=====
- AE Lock at low light with no override. My model has a button which bypasses
the AE Lock but this is used when loading film, the ae pairing defaults to f8 and 1/125
which can't be used for low light
- Uses Mercury 1.35v px 625 batteries. I used the fast draining Wein Zinc battery.

here are some images from my recent trip, they are mostly uncropped:

35dcneopan-1.jpg


35dcneopan-2.jpg


35dcneopan-3.jpg


35dcneopan-4.jpg


35dcneopan-5.jpg




thanks for viewing...

raytoei
 

Last edited:
here are two beauty shots of the Olympus 35 DC , captured on the Epson R-D1 with Elmarit 90/f2.8

olydc-a.jpg


olydc-b.jpg
 

Nice review.
I've been doing research and comparison over the net for this said camera.

Thanks for the review.
:)

*now im poisoned.
 

Thanks for the review. I have a Konica C35, pretty much with the same function equipped with slower lens. But slower doesn't mean bad, the Hexanon lens is really sweet. I carry this tiny RF with me instead of a spare 35mm lens, because I usually shoot with a 50mm and I don't want the hassle of changing lens when I need to shoot 35mm focal length.
 

here is one last pic, notice the textures....

"Public Transport"
35dcneopan-6.jpg
 

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