I guess you'd want to focus on durability and get fully manual cameras with durability and few moving parts. Others will likely have more ideas on what's built like a tank, but the first thing that comes to mind in would be one of the Linhof Technicas. Metal box construction. View camera simple. Lenses as complicated (modern shutters) or not (shutterless lenses). And probably the most flexible tripod-bound photographic option.
In medium format, maybe a Rolleiflex (again simple construction). In 35mm, I guess one of the early all manual/all metal Nikons.
Leo
For those of us who would like to have another 60+ years of film use, what would be good long term investments?
Jeff Kubach said:In 35mm, I guess one of the early all manual/all metal Nikons.
Leo
Maybe even the old Canon F-1.
Jeff
'I'm not a collector, this is just redundancy'
An excellent idea, by the way. I have three T90's; when one breaks and I can no longer get it repaired I'll move on to the next. Same concept with the multiple EOS RT and 630's I have scattered about.
Got my second M645 Pro body this summer, contemplating a third, to say nothing of my foolish accumulation of backs and inserts, more than I could possibly need in this lifetime.
Keeping old cameras around but not using them means they may break through drying of lubricants, stress on spring parts, etc. ... you probably want to run some film through all of them rather than using one until it breaks before going to the next one.
As for film, I fear it going away too. That will make all my 35mm gear into paperweights but I hope that time is far off. Could you squirrel away a lifetime of film? Make your own developer and fixer? I suppose but it sounds like a lot of work.
hpulley said:Good old black hat trick...
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