Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

By Roger
Having succumbed to the temptation to impulse buy a camera that I knew only by its reputation for having long been the inexpensive way into medium format, a Lubitel 166, I decided to compare it with a camera that should provide it with stiff competition. Ideally I would have used my Minolta Autocord, which also takes 6×6 images, but there was already a part-used film in my Bronica ETRSi, so I decided to use that. I went out, on a sunny day, to the nearest riverside with both cameras, a tripod and two QR plates. I am just ignoring the difference between the two formats.
I found a view with lots of detail that I thought would make for a good comparison, put a 75mm lens on the Bronica, and took a shot. I then went to put a QR plate on the Lubitel, and found the first issue with the camera: the tripod bush was too short for the screw on the QR plate. Of course, that undermines my comparison in that the Lubitel was not fastened to a tripod, but I hoped that resting it on a solid wall wherever possible would be a substitute for the tripod. I then took half a dozen shots of the same scene with both cameras, the camera settings being whatever my exposure meter said. It was a bright day, so most of the shots were f8 to f11. Of course, I am well aware that the comparison might have been different wide open.
The films, both Kentmere 200, were developed together in freshly mixed ID-11, 1+1, for the recommended 8.45 minutes.They were scanned at 3200 dpi in an Epson V700, with the only adjustment being auto levels. In PhotoLab I did not more than adjust the occasional image so the horizon was horizontal, correct errors in cropping when I was scanning and remove the most obvious dust spots. Here are the images, with 1:1 crops of a couple of them.
Lubitel 166
Bronica ETRSi + 75mm PE
Lubitel 166
ETRSi + 75mm PE

Next, 100% crops from both images. Here I wonder whether the issue might be focus, but I get similar results from pixel-peeping all the other images, so I assume not.

Lubitel 166
ETRSi + 75mm PE
Lubitel 166
ETRSi + 75mm PE
Lubitel 166
ETRSi + 75mm PE

 

 

Lubitel 166
ETRSi + 75mm PE
No one will be surprised to find that the Bronica appears to have the better image quality. The first thing to strike me was the greater contrast, which must be part of the reason why the it looks sharper. I guess that could be that the exposures were different and that this, combined with auto levels is the reason for the difference. Or might the focus be slightly different in each camera? The Lubitel also has some vignetting in some shots. However, my reaction is that for suitable scenes, and with decent light and contrast, not to mention film that is suitable for the subject, it is very usable, so given its weight and size, it might find its way into a camera bag. Of course, this raises the question of whether it beats an even more compact folding camera, or whether the improvement over 35mm is enough. Those are tests I haven’t done.
I took a number of shots with the Bronica where I decided that square format would not make any sense, and this is one I liked.
Bronica 75mm PE
Of more interest are two taken on the Lubitel after the film on the Bronica was finished. I finished the roll on a cloudier day, and lower contrast landscapes. A couple of shots of green landscapes made me wonder whether the Lubitel/Kentmere 200 combination was up to the task, but I thought these two were encouraging; the tones in the first one and the contrast and brightness in the second. (I know I should have tried to tone down the highlights, but I was deliberately not doing further processing.)
Lubitel 166
Lubitel 166
The Lubitel has a lot going for it. Weight, size, simplicity (and of course price). I also liked the the light touch on the shutter button, and having to cock the shutter separately from winding the film. That way it was easy to avoid accidental exposures or double exposures. Against that, winding on was difficult as I found I needed to have bright sunlight on the red window to be able to see the numbers on the back of the film and there was the issue with the tripod bush. A surprising issue was that the images were large enough to overlap the numbers printed on the edge of the film, making some of the negative numbers difficult to read, not that this is a significant problem, given I can count up to 12. It was also inconvenient that when I tried to look in close to focus, I found it hard to see the whole image in the finder, and sometimes saw only a circular image and needed to move my eye further away to see the whole image.
There are clearly good reasons to take out the Bronica, not least that I can also use it for panoramic shots on 35mm film (this was my first use of 120 film in it) but I thought the Lubitel held up well. It might even be possible to lessen the difference with more processing, such as sharpening with Topaz Photo AI.

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Comments

Ed on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Hi Roger - thanks for a great article. It was the difference on contrast that immediately caught my eye too. The Bronica images have more depth and clearly the sharpness is better, easily seen in your cropped shots. However the Lubitel is definitely a worthy camera and great value too. I saw one in an 'antiques' store on Friday by coincidence and was quite tempted to have a look at it. However I passed by as I've got more than enough cameras for the moment. The interesting thing to me is the relatively light weight of the Lubitel. I just find I can't carry heavy gear anymore. I'll put the Lubitel on the wish list for the future as I would like to try a medium format camera at some point.

Thanks once again for a most interesting read.

Ed
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Martin on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Hi Roger,
thanks for a fun-to-read comparison. It shows that differences are not that big, especially in the image center.
I have neither camera so I cannot reproduce the test but that does not really matter, I trust your findings (and why wouldn't I)
Thanks and best wishes
Martin in Austria
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Neal Wellons on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

The hard to see numbers in the red window can be fixed easily. Ilford backing papers are the hardest to see with Foma and Lomo backing papers much, much easier. Kodak backing paper number visibility is in between the two. I've compared lots of films in my Holgas and now shoot Foma films for B&W and Lomo films for color. You can't miss the numbers. (There is a slight chance you will get print-through with certain lighting conditions but I find print-through on much less than 5% of my shots.)
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Rich replied:

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

The near impossibility of seeing the numbers has driven me away from the Ilford 120 films. What ever was Ilford thinking? To save a few cents by using less ink??

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Gauthier on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

I’ve only used a Lubitel once, but it was an older model (I’d bought it as a gift for a former colleague who’d told me it was his first camera). It’s a case of the camera’s weaknesses being its strengths; in particular, when used for portraits, the softness in the corners draws the eye to the subject. And the bokeh is quite pleasing. But its major flaw, for me, is its dark and very uncomfortable viewfinder.
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Gary Smith on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

The Lubitel certainly holds its own! I found that I preferred my Perkeo II folder for 6 x 6 over my Mamiya 645 due to weight that was until I acquired a Rollei 3.5B. That one wins now.

I know that many who shoot film are opposed to tweaking their film shots in post after they've been scanned however the Lubitel lack of contrast is an easy fix in post.

Thanks for your article.
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Peter Kornaukhov on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Very good photos! Own one of these, 166 Universal (without 6x4.5 frame). For reportage, it makes sense only with
sports viewfinder (frame). Elsewhere, the lens has very good coating specially for color film. Kodak Portra 400
with flash in interior is the best. For bw, you only shoot at F:22 with tripod (street and nature) and results are also the best (tested Ilford XP2 400). Do not open the aperture wide with bw film and you will be surprised with the shots. Good luck
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Eric Rose on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

What a great comparison! Shows we haven't really come all that far. Either camera would be excellent at making creative, expressive images.
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Roger on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Thanks for all for the kind remarks, and the comments. In particular, Neal, for your advice on how to see the numbers, though I am assuming that practice makes that easier. I haven't tried Foma films (yet?) having only used Kentmere and Ilford. I've for enough of these in the fridge that it will be a while before I try others. The advantage of the Lubitel for me is weight, though the competition really comes from a Zeiss Nettar folder. But life is too short for testing every pair of cameras I might use. From what I have read, Rollei TLRs that Gary mentioned sound very good, though I would find it hard to justify adding one to my collection of under-used TLRs which includes one I haven't even got round to using yet. One limitation of my tests, and I am sure there others, is that I did not try wide aperture shots where focusing would be critical and flaws in the lens might be more evident. But it was a very bright day and with ISO 200 film, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, to get the right exposure with f3.5.
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Richard Arbib on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

I had a Bronica S2 that I bought in a PX in Vietnam when I was in the Army. Great photos, but the shutter and mirror noise were incredible. It wasn't a camera for candid photos.
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Roger replied:

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Hopefully the ETRSi is better than the S2, though it does make a serious clunk when the mirror flips up. The ability to lock up the mirror was one reason why I ruled out getting older models though I have not yet tried using it yet, usually because I have hand-held.

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Charles Corke on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 10/05/2026

Thanks for an interesting read. The Lubitel certainly returns some excellent images, but of course the Bronica wins the day on ultimate image quality.
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Charles Young on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 11/05/2026

I have been satisfied with my Lubitel. Good price. Works without batteries. etc.
I also use selenium exposure meters
My favorite photos are informal portraits.

Chuck
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Jeffery Luhn on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 11/05/2026

Roger,
Thanks for an interesting well written article. I always thought of the Lubitel as a 'toy' camera, like the Clack or Diana, but your shots look quite good! Were you surprised? I am. I'm not a good candidate to own one because I have around 12 good 120 cameras, but it looks like a great MF camera for students. Thanks! Jeffery
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Roger replied:

Comment posted: 11/05/2026

Not really surprised, given the weather that day. Based on memory that is no doubt faulty, I think the difference is much less than the difference I found 40 or so years ago when I upgraded from some sort of Yashica to a Minolta Autocord. Of course, the reason may be the absence of f3.5 shots, though I avoided those partly because it would primarily be a test of my focusing ability.

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Stephen Barnett on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 11/05/2026

A very useful review and comparison. Many years ago I bought a Lubitel 166 from a camera shops bargain bin for £5 thinking it would be an alternative to a Holga which were about £15 new back then. I was very disappointed to find the lens on the Lubitel was actually very good and not at all what I expected, too good for what I needed really. The only problem I have with it is seeing the point of focus clearly, I get my eye lined up it comes and goes with the slightest movement. I hope you continue to enjoy it, it's a feather weight by comparison with many other TLR's and I find the lens works well with colour film which is where the 'character' starts to fully come through.
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Roger replied:

Comment posted: 11/05/2026

I agree with you on focusing. The lead image is intended to indicate one of the problems, even though with an eye much closer, the view is better.

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Andrés Purriños on Lubitel 166 (vs. Bronica ETRSi) – Testing an impulse purchase

Comment posted: 15/05/2026

Great comparison, and nice pictures btw. I own both cameras (Bronica is an older ETR, but same lens) and have found similar results in contrast. Which is whats should be expected, since the Bronica lens has a modern optical design and coating, while the Lubitel's is a simple triplet. If you compare the corners it's much softer (and even more at maximum aperture of 3.5).

Nevertheless, is a small and light camera that can produce nice pictures, specially in black and white. I have replaced it recently with a Yashica TLR, but not because of the optics, but the viewfinder. It's hard to frame the picture, not to talk of focusing. Still, the difference in weight is noticeable so it's a great camera for long walks.
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Roger replied:

Comment posted: 15/05/2026

I agree completely with all of this. I recently acquired a Yashica (a different model from the one I found unsatisfactory many years ago), but I haven’t managed to put a film through it yet.

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