I neglected to say that my Olympus Zuiko 50/1.8 lens is the best "loupe"
I've ever had, and lens can be had for $25. Turn it around and look
through the back and you get great magnification and quality.
John
At 10:31 AM 10/07/2001 -0400, you wrote:
There's a Vivitar projector that has a little flip-up door on top. Voila!
a slide viewer, no magnification, of course. It cuts out a step and lets
you decide if you want to put the slide in the carrousel. I'm not too
sure of the quality of this projector, although I've found no fault so
far. It's even auto-focus. The main criterion when I bought it was cost;
it's nice and cheap.
John
At 09:28 PM 10/06/2001 -0700, you wrote:
How elaborate a unit are you looking for? I have one at home that you can
load 36 slides into an view them one at a time. It is rather big and
bulky though. I also have a small Agfa unit that you view one at a time.
It has a small lens that magnafies the image. Kodak has a very nice
little unit that is very compact, but does not magnify the image at all,
but actaully works very well, especially when combined with a loupe.
Jim Couch
Wayne Culberson wrote:
> I've been looking for a hand held slide viewer, and have seen some
> listed at bhphoto, but they don't have much info on them. Does anyone
> have any recommendations as what would be a good one? Thanks, Wayne
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