Many love X-Pan and the prices have gone way up in recent years, but I only recently got into the format with the GFX100 since it provides plenty of extra megapixels to use. X-Pan is primarily seen as a Hasselblad format, but Fujifilm also released an X-Pan camera the TX-1. Amazon and B&H Photo carry used XPAN cameras if you’re looking for one. Above is a lengthy review of the TX-1 and below are excerpts from the review.
Interchangeable lens
35mm format
Fujifilm has a Titanium/aluminum body that is champagne colored
There is a wood front grip that can be swapped for a ruber or custom one
Range Finder camera
Came with a 45mm f/4 and 90mm f/4
There is also a rare 30mm wide-angle f/5.6 that requires an external viewfinder that is rare and expensive
You can shoot regular 35mm 24x36mm or 24x65mm
You can change the format size whenever you want
Panoramic mode gets 20-21 images out of a 36 exposure roll
Built-in OVF is very bright and it adjusts to the lens mounted and has auto parallaxing
Focal Plain shutter that goes 1/1000 to 8 seconds and then an above move (bulb) and self-timer that goes off after 10-seconds
TTL only covers a small area of the center and it’s a center-weighted averaging meter
If you’re using something like slide film the TTL might not be accurate enough
ISO can be set automatic with X encoded film or manually on the front
There is an aperture priority mode/automatic mode/manual mode
The light meter is displayed in the OVF via +/-/o
The selected shutter speed is only displayed on the back on a tiny LCD
You can half-press the shutter button to see what shutter speed is being used on the back when shooting automatic
The rear LCD also shows settings and battery power
There is an exposure compensation dial on the top right that goes +2/-2 EV in half stops
You can shoot continuously at 3fps standard and 2fps in pano
The film counter counts down
The camera uses two CR2 batteries providing 6V of power and they last at least 20 rolls
The lenses are great and obviously optimized for panoramic shooting
The lenses have great corner sharpness and almost no vignetting on the 45mm, no vignetting on the 90mm and just some vignetting on the 30mm
There is almost no distortion across the frame on any of the lenses and it only happens when the photographer doesn’t position the camera correctly
All 3 lenses have beautiful color rendition
Amazing for landscapes
You need a lot of light when shooting with this camera because of the limited aperture of f/4
The lenses are f/4 because they are medium format lenses so you will need faster film or a tripod
Panoramic can give a very cinematic look
It can be tricky to get a straight correct composition, which can lead to heavy distortions
The frame is huge and it can be hard to get a nice composition
You shoot completely differently with this camera and see the world very differently
The film winds into the canister instead of out
It’s frustrating to not have the shutter speed in the OVF
The only downside is its price at this time is very high
It is an electronic camera so it could just die on you and become a brick