OlyMan
Member
What cameras have you owned/used/seen which have a performance better than you would expect considering the intended market when new? Thinking maybe some cheaper Russian/Eastern cameras might fall into that category, though I have no experience. However for my part I'd like to nominate the Olympus Trip 35.
Aimed at holidaying consumers who in time would all too frequently 'upgrade' to cheap compacts with more features but worse photos, Olympus gave the Trip everything it needed and nothing it didn't. This mainly comprised of a rugged metal build, a sharp Tessar-style 42mm F/2.8 lens, zone focussing, and a solar-powered 'program' exposure system that was entirely non-dependent on batteries. Although the camera only had two shutter speeds of 1/40th and 1/200th, the program curve - achieved with clever mechanics - favored small apertures over the faster shutter speed when possible, in order to maximize DOF and so minimize focussing errors from the zone-focus lens.
Definitely a camera where the whole was considerably more than the sum of the parts.
Aimed at holidaying consumers who in time would all too frequently 'upgrade' to cheap compacts with more features but worse photos, Olympus gave the Trip everything it needed and nothing it didn't. This mainly comprised of a rugged metal build, a sharp Tessar-style 42mm F/2.8 lens, zone focussing, and a solar-powered 'program' exposure system that was entirely non-dependent on batteries. Although the camera only had two shutter speeds of 1/40th and 1/200th, the program curve - achieved with clever mechanics - favored small apertures over the faster shutter speed when possible, in order to maximize DOF and so minimize focussing errors from the zone-focus lens.
Definitely a camera where the whole was considerably more than the sum of the parts.