bblhed
Member
They are all great cameras, Nikon will allow you to add a lot of toys to the camera, some say it is a creative advantage, others say more choice is not always better. If you have GAS, get the Nikon.
Thank so much for your opinion.
I have been looking at Minolta SRTs and XD 11s. I think that Minolta is on par with Nikon and Canon in quality and now they seem easier and cheaper to find. Any opinions on this?
Thanks
The criteria for choosing a particular camera in the 70s and selecting one now have changed. All the top brands made very good cameras.
Does it really matter which system is better?
Show us that you can out-shoot your equipment then come back.
Regarding 35mm SLR's:
The Nikon F and F2 became the most popular with professionals in the 60's, and Nikon enjoyed a reputation as "the best".
It is not a matter of out shooting your equipment. It is about being able to find lenses, parts if camera breaks at a reasonable price. If you do not have anything nice or constructive to say, just do not say anything. Keep it to yourself.
In the 70s and 80s I worked with a guy who was an optical engineer and before coming to the US he worked for Nikon. At that time Nikon was the only Japanese camera manufacturer to make their own glass. Everyone else used glass made by Hoya. Theirs was a very excellent formula and a highly guarded secret. I think their lenses were the best of the Japanese lenses and their cameras were very dependable and less likely to break down. I still have two of my Nikon film cameras and they're still going strong. But I wholeheartedly agree with R gould above!
Canon and Minolta made their own glass.
Part of my decision to buy a Minolta in the mid 70s was the fact they made their own glass.
from Minolta lens brochure.
Minolta was fairly well known for making their own glass. As I recall, Canon made some of their own glass. Nikon made their own, and advertised it frequently. Fuji also made their own glass.Canon and Minolta made their own glass.
Part of my decision to buy a Minolta in the mid 70s was the fact they made their own glass.
The AE-1 in 1976 was a response to the OM-10 of 1979? The AE-1 was the first SLR to be controlled by a microprocessor. This lowered the parts count making it one of the first of the inexpensive auto-exposure SLRs that helped create the SLR boom of the late 70's - early 80's. By 1979, pretty much every camera maker had an auto-exposure, battery-dependent, plastic top-plate SLR at an entry-level price point.
Thank you, fstop.
[...]I am not sure when Canon started.
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