eli griggs
Member
it took away my will to live
Look into the Golden Light that is a Canon F-1 and resurrect your love of photography!
it took away my will to live
In my mind, Nikon F6. Full stop. Can use pretty much any Nikon F-mount lens ever made (Canon 1v is limited to EOS lenses only, and cannot use any prior FD glass), and is a robust, reliable, highly functional workhorse. With an optional grip to turn it into a film-consuming monster. Apart from its dependency upon battery power (and having an F2 as backup helps that), it's just a great film camera.
In the spirit of recommending what I own / owned... in calendar order:What 35mm film SLR camera systems do you think are the best to get into right now?
Which system do you think has the 'best' lenses?
Dead simple, basic and would take a tank out - Nikkormat FT2 (only thing is the mercury battery, but the later FT3 is normal SR44).
The FT2 also uses an SR44 battery - it was the FT and FTN that used the mercury 625 batteries.
The FTn I have now is a mercury battery, as you say, but it gets an SR44 just the same and meters adequately.
I guess "adequately" is a subjective term, but running a 1.5V battery in place of a 1.3V battery won't give you very accurate results, and the voltage will drop over time, making it inconsistent through its lifetime.
Silver instead of ordinary alkaline.
Diode in the adaptor, or simply setting the ASA to compensate.
Got any more niggles?
IMO, when considering a piece of kit mechanical kit that runs on a mercury battery, I suggest photographers who want to shoot with the O.E. meter should pull up pics of the battery wiring in and behind the battery compartment, and see if the positive line has room for employing a voltage reducing Schottkey diode.
If so, it's a simple job to put one online and a low cost Harbor Freight soldering iron is for one if you need an iron.
Just be sure to use silver solder and the correct flux for non-plumbing projects like electronics.
Also, remember silver cells have the best performance and life and some cameras like the Canonet QL-17 G-III does not need the conversion, according to many members feedback on this topic.
Godspeed to All, take a photograph everyday, even if it of your own hand or foot.
Eli
I guess "adequately" is a subjective term, but running a 1.5V battery in place of a 1.3V battery won't give you very accurate results, and the voltage will drop over time, making it inconsistent through its lifetime.
Sadly, while some meters will be usable when a battery is installed with a different voltage - usually by adjusting the ASA/DIN setting - other meters become non-linear, and therefore essentially unusable when an incorrect battery is installed.
It depends on the metering circuit used.
So it is worth checking against another reliable meter if you already have in hand the silver oxide battery and the meter, but without that check, you cannot count on a simple ASA/DIN adjustment doing the job.
Do I see Nikomat suggested as modern/newish?
Was the thread moved 50 years back in time?
Well, after 2 years of us all keeping this thread alive, I finally bit the bullet and bought myself a very lovely Pentax LX (later model) that looks like it has been barely used. The clear piece of protective tape on the bottom of said Pentax LX was never removed is still completely intact. I bought the camera due to its impressive metering range (-6.5 EV to 20 EV) and the highly-rated Pentax lenses it can use. While I still haven't taken the LX out in the field, everything on it appears to be working properly. Without film in the camera, however, I noticed that the Integrated Direct Metering (IDM) appears to be working fine for shutter speeds at or above 1/60th of a second, however at shutter speeds slower than this, it takes a little while longer for the mirror & shutter to fall back into position. I assume that, because the camera meters off the film at speeds slower that 1/60th of a second, when there's no film in the camera, the light meter is just reading and metering off the pitch black pressure plate (instead of film) causing the auto-exposure mode to keep the shutter open for longer. (Let me know if I'm wrong with my logic.)
Anyway, if you guys can offer any suggestion for any high-quality lenses I should get for this camera, I'd really appreciate it. The SMC Pentax-M 50mm f/1.7 that you see in the photo below is sort of busted so I won't be using it.That said, now that I'm effectively starting from scratch, I'm looking for either a classic 28mm, 35mm, 50mm, and 85mm/100mm prime lens setup (or the Limited series of 31mm, 43mm, or 77mm Pentax lenses) or even just a really sharp zoom lens or two. They don't even necessarily have to be Pentax brand lenses. Any suggestions would be very much appreciated! Many thanks!
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Nikon fm2 and Minolta x700. I use the 700 the most. But if I had my first K1000 I would probably shoot with it.
I feel my early days with the K1000 some of the best shot I’ve ever taken. But it might be my age now affecting my stuff now.
I had full auto Minolta 9 something that I sold. Didn’t shoot much with it.
When I was ready to trade in my F2 I did consider the LX, had all the same features as the F3P, weather sealed, built in flash shoe with a large numbers of viewfinders and focusing screens. I decided on the F3P as my employer paid 1/2 the cost and I had Nikon lens. If I had been a freelancer I might have gone with the LX.
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