Smaug01
Member
So my brother went to a second hand store and bought me a T50 for a B-Day present. Nice gesture but I’ve got too many cameras already. Still I futzed around with it and read a manual online and I guessed it’s like a point and shoot being you can’t change the aperture without the camera defaulting to 1/60 shutter speed. Anyone here shoot one and have opinions?
I was just going to pickup a T70 for fun and for the extra features over the T50, a little more info/control, but after reading the manual online I thought, really, what drugs were they doing when they designed the camera and wrote the manuel? So I'm just gonna stick with my straight forward Maxxum 70 and use the T50 on the side a couple of times.
That was nice of him! Looking at these two quotes though, we can see why you have too many cameras already: in the first, you said you've got too many cameras, and the second (many replies later) you're thinking about adding ANOTHER one. :-D
Do you have an FD lenses? If not, you might consider picking up an inexpensive one just to go on this body, then take the body with you when you just want some snapshots. (but good ones) If so, you should keep it and even consider re-gifting it with a lens to someone who can appreciate it more.
Wow, just look at this snobbery! Is this how you react when your family member gives you a gift you didn't specifically request? Then, several long off-topic replies. I feel like you just came from DPReview Open Talk...And looks it I might add.
As neutered and lacking in charm and enthusiasm as the Minolta 370s or FM10.
Sure you could use it, in the same way you can use “comfortable, sensible” clothing or drive a Seat, Skoda or Hyundai “because it’s the same on the inside as all the other cars” and “it just need to go from A to B”.
It’s the baby out with the bathwater.
Aesthetics and provenance matters.
Even if you pretend it doesn’t.
It's not that; Canon was looking at the bigger picture. They were made for different target markets. We're generally not the target market for the T50. With the T50, they were trying to make SLRs more accessible to people who had been shooting (less capable) point & shoots or fixed lens rangefinders. Get them into the Canon system, so they can sell lenses and flashes to them. (similar to what Nikon tried with the EM, Pentax with the ME and Olympus with the OM10)I must have a t50 and a t70 somewhere, or perhaps only one of both. What I remember of them is that these were by far the most annoying, least usable SLR's I have ever touched. It's odd, because the t90 is, apart from the noise and the way it eats batteries, one of the most pleasant, functional and intuitive cameras I've used. It's almost like canon first conceived the t90 but decided to strip everything that's good from it, resulting in the t50 and the t70, and then released the t90 as if to say "look, we actually had a very good idea, but didn't want you to know just yet." Needless to say, my t50 and/or t70 is/are in a box somewhere and unlikely to emerge from it before I die and someone will have to sort out all my junk...
T50 target customer: See above.
T60 target customer: Someone who wants a manual SLR without paying a lot of money, and Canon didn't think the customers were enough to design their own. So they bought the generic Cosina design and had them slap an FD mount on it and re-brand it.
T70 target customer: Non-professional photographers, or possibly a back-up to a pro rig like an F1
T90 target customer: Professional photographers looking for newer technology than F1
Canon found out that autofocus was The Way of the Future, but they weren't ready to release theirs yet. EOS was probably already in development when the T90 came out.
Nikon released their F4 in 1988. Canon released EOS 650 and 620 in 1989 and the T series & FD mount were quickly obsoleted.
Canon later did the same thing with the EOS 850. It was their stripped-down EOS body; similar features to the T50, but adding autofocus and better looks.