There are a lot more low quality photographers around than there are cameras.
I wonder what the lens quality was like on the C3.
Yashica are better known for their rangefinders and TLRs, but the original FR is a fine camera and one of my favourites to use. A contemporary reported rated it higher than the Contax RTS (also Kyocera made), and the Yashica and Contax lenses are excellent. Its one known flaw is a frame counter that dies young.I'd say all the major Japanese brands of SLRs had about equal quality. These are: Pentax, Canon, Nikon, Konica, Minolta, Olympus, and Mamiya. Yashica is probably as good, but their offerings seemed uninspiring to me.
Nikon=1If you could rank the all the major camera manufacturers in terms of quality and reliability with 1 being the highest, what would your list be?
A more meaningful question might be "which is the most reliable camera at a given price point?"If you could rank the all the major camera manufacturers in terms of quality and reliability with 1 being the highest, what would your list be?
I repair cameras as a hobby, so I've seen what's inside of them. I agree with MattKing: "There are a whole bunch tied for first. And a couple who aren't." Through the 60s to the mid-to-late 70s, I'd say all the major Japanese brands of SLRs had about equal quality. These are: Pentax, Canon, Nikon, Konica, Minolta, Olympus, and Mamiya. Yashica is probably as good, but their offerings seemed uninspiring to me. Miranda was also good, as was Cosina and its labels of Ricoh, Sears, and such. But brands like Praktica and Petri were a step down. Things went downhill when electronics and plastics took over in the late 1970s. Some such SLRs are good, such as the AE-1, but I suggest avoiding some others such as Minolta's X-series or the Olympus OM-G. I've never seen a Minolta X or OM-G with good electronics; perhaps your luck has been better. It's a similar story with rangefinders, except that a few good brands like Aires didn't make it through the 60s.
Mark Overton
If you could rank the all the major camera manufacturers in terms of quality and reliability with 1 being the highest, what would your list be?
Argus of course as it is the only one that I am aware of that offered a Lifetime guarantee . . .![]()
Very true. The antithesis of this might be a camera like the Ricoh GR film series, or indeed most of the super-compacts of the nineties and early noughties. Well built physically, and ergonomically very nice, but containing fragile components with a short life span and no long term repair and component trail. In the end, simple, tough cameras will always outlive technological marvels.In a lot of ways the C3 epitomizes American engineering of its period, reliable, serviceable, and designed to be used, rather than admired. Mechanically they are simple, unsophisticated machines. While it would be hyperbole to praise their design as minimalist, simplicity is their strength, since there's not much to go wrong.
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