RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
unfortunately;not my expwerience;a brand-new Praktika bought in 1972 came with a shutter that lasted just one week before it broke.luvkely. I got my hard-owned money back and saved up for a Nikon FM,which I still have and which still works flawlessly. Noe they can be had for less than $50. It's an easy choice really.I beg to differ on reliability of Prakticas, especially their shutter has been close to bullet proof, I'd venture to say not less reliable than majority of shutters ever produced. The mediocrity is also a stretch to apply to ALL of them. Again, Prakticas were hardly mediocre in many areas and are rather reliable (and cheap) bodies for M42 crowd. Surely a lot of cameras from Western side had better fit and finish and overall give higher confidence. Praktica / Zenit are not on my high list, but have a few in my collection and they do not fall very far from many other makes / models.
I've already stated that it all depends on price. In Czech Republic it is entirely possible he can find either camera for $20-30 in great condition and with lens of course. If he is looking at paying above $50, then I would definitely aim at Western / Japanese models. Sometimes I check prices for DDR/Soviet cameras on western versions of eBay and find them stupendously ridiculous and far above market value. If that's the source, than for sure a much better cameras can be had for same money.
Of course, if someone thinks that his/her photography stinks because gear was not from the premium section of a store, then I rest my case.


, plus it had perhaps the best stop down metering implementation of any such camera. Mine still works, after having sat idle for perhaps 20 years, shutter sounds good, etc. Since the metering is a bridge circuit it is forgiving of cell voltage, while designed for a mercury cell its happy with a silver oxide; no adjustment should be necessary.