Colin Templeton
Member
It's completely dependable.
The film rails on these three cameras - Nikon F2, Canon F-1 New, and Canon EOS-1V have shrunk through each new generation. As much as I love my EOS-1V, I'm mightily impressed by how over-engineered the F2 is.
I'm fairly new to this forum, and have inadvertently posted the same image twice.
We do live in a plastic age now, but it's interesting to look back at something like a Nikon F, or F2 to see how things were once built.
Even cameras as prosaic as the little Voigtlander Vito fixed-lens cameras were made of machined and cast parts assembled by expert bench technicians:We do live in a plastic age now, but it's interesting to look back at something like a Nikon F, or F2 to see how things were once built.
I would imagine many things have a similar story. Everything from guitar amps, to cars, to washing machines.I like some of these replies, but am unsure how to indicate that. I know that the EOS-1V is completely battery dependent, and the F-1 New is largely battery dependent, but that doesn't really trouble me. They just work, and are reliable.
We do live in a plastic age now, but it's interesting to look back at something like a Nikon F, or F2 to see how things were once built.
The more I use my EOS-1V, the more in awe I am of the thought that went into the design. And the durability. It just goes, with minimal effort from the photographer. Back in 2008, the place I worked, my boss there had a very scuffed EOS-1V that he'd long since retired. We found it in a drawer one day. There was hardly any paint on it. The junior photographer there asked if she could put a film in it to see if it still worked OK. Every function still worked.I purchased a Canon EOS 1N and PDBE1 and Command Back E1 at Easter,1994. This camera is still in occasional use, never been serviced, never faulted nor blinked, though it is dwarfed in workload by a Pentax 67 and ALPA SW20. Many of my prints to the Ilfochrome Classic process came off roll after roll of Velvia 50 from this camera.
I also have a full complement of L-series lenses as and when required. I do not require any high-tech, over-specified camera for my work — it is me doing the decision-making, not necessarily the camera.
The back plane of the 1V pictured is pretty much identical to the 1N, as is the overall footprint.
Ergonomics and derring-do with design drove the idea of Canon's T-series and the later EOS-series which continues to this day, albeit now getting more bulkier, crowded and chunkier on the top plate. People didn't necessarily embrace the T-series Canons when they first appeared, and then the EOS series also raised eyebrows, mostly for summarily discarding the FD mount in favour of an all-electronic mount. It did rub folks up the wrong way. Like the saying goes, get over it and get on with it. Millions of photographers did just that and the 1N and those that followed were true epoch-making cameras that still command a devout following today.
I think really the 1N and 1V struck the right and beautiful balance, despite quibbles about buttons doubling up with functions and still other buttons hidden behind the "trapdoor"!
A-P
I would imagine many things have a similar story. Everything from guitar amps, to cars, to washing machines.
I have read a lot of good things about the EOS.....is it 1V and 1N.?
As i get older, i might need to consider something like that for the AF.
You almost wonder, with the way prices go up (and sometimes down) if it would be a good idea to buy one now, for use in the future.![]()
The price of all decent film cameras seems to be constantly rising these past few years.
And completely dependent -- on batteries.
At $500-600 the EOS-1V is a downright bargain compared to the current prices of P&S cameras like the Ricoh GR or the Contax T3
I suspect the thinner rails are an improvement to facilitate faster frame rates with motor drive rather than cost cutting.
That's about what a GR goes for. And even with a faulty display, the thing is still a marvel. And what a lens.At $500-600 the EOS-1V is a downright bargain compared to the current prices of P&S cameras like the Ricoh GR or the Contax T3
And my computer and cell phone have failed me over and over thanks to their dead batteries.
Thanks so much for reminding me of all the trouble they have caused me over the years.
Maybe taking a few pictures with a camera that won't fail will help bring down my blood pressure.
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