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Is this Minolta Worth it?

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Mike Kennedy

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A good friend of mine popped in yesterday and announced she had a belated birthday gift for me.Handed over a plastic bag that contained a very dirty Minolta Maxxum 7000 she had purchased at a flea market.
I'm a Nikon/Pentax shooter but this camera looks interesting.Alas the battery holder is absent.
Can a battery holder be obtained at a reasonable price?
Is there any Canadian supplier?
 
A good friend of mine popped in yesterday and announced she had a belated birthday gift for me.Handed over a plastic bag that contained a very dirty Minolta Maxxum 7000 she had purchased at a flea market.
I'm a Nikon/Pentax shooter but this camera looks interesting.Alas the battery holder is absent.
Can a battery holder be obtained at a reasonable price?
Is there any Canadian supplier?

Keep the camera and the friend. Both may need a CLA though.

Steve
 
The 7000 was the first autofocus 35mm SLR camera. Knobs and dials were out of favor then, so the 7000 relied on rubber buttons to activate electrical contacts. These fail over time, so even if you did get a battery holder you might have problems. Minolta lenses are very nice, so if it came with a good, working 50mm lens, it'd be worth fixing up this body or getting a Maxxum 7 or 9 to use it on.
 
You'll pay between 50=100 bucks for a good used body, so unless you enjoy restoring cameras, it's most probably not a practical proposition

wayne
 
Thanks all.
I'll keep the camera and the friend.A sweet gesture from someone who knows I love photography.All she said was "It holds film".
Might run into an old body with the battery adapter further on down the road.
 
Minolta 7000's came from the factory set up for AAA batteries but the battery holder could be removed and replaced with one which held AA batteries. The AA holder also made the hand-grip a little thicker. You ought to be able to find one or the other battery holder, but as previously mentioned if you want one you'll probably be better off just buying a clean one.

Pretty decent camera: I used one for several years before getting a 7xi. It wasn't really the first autofocus camera but it was the first commercially successful one -- Minolta sold a boat-load of them. AF is slow by current standards but also by current standards the controls are super-simple to use and the exposure calculation is excellent.

Mike
 
I saw this thread a little late. The camera is probably fine, but the lenses in the Minolta (now Sony) line up are stunning. The 50mm 1.4, 28-70mm G, the 70-200mm G, 100mm 2.8 (regular and macro), and perhaps the 300mm G are the creme de la creme of lenses. To me, my current philosophy is that you invest in the lenses, and make do with the bodies.
 
Mike,

I have a non-working Minolta 7000 with a good battery holder that you can have.

-Marc


Thanks all.
I'll keep the camera and the friend.A sweet gesture from someone who knows I love photography.All she said was "It holds film".
Might run into an old body with the battery adapter further on down the road.
 
Ah! Someone as bad as I am for not being able to resist things that are cheap/free whether we need them or not!
Long may we both continue!
Steve
 
Thanks Marc Akermann!

Not only did Marc A. send me the battery holder but included the camera as well.Above & beyond the call.
By the y,my friend's gift Minolta 7000 powers up and all functions seem to work.I'm using it today to photograph the local spring freshet.
I've got a question.The manual states that there is a battery located somewhere in the camera that controls the data function.Can someone expand on this.

Mike
 
The internal battery is under the battery compartment. There are one or two screws. Carefully take the screw out and carefully take the internal cover off. There is a single wire soldered to the cover. Simply pop the battery out and replace. Common battery. I think that the only function it serves is for the internal clock/calendar.
 
Mike, this 3-volt battery is really thin and is 2 cm. in diameter. They seem to last forever and battery stores around here (Michigan) seem to have them in stock so guess they're not uncommon. This extra battery is indeed located in the battery compartment behind a metal plate. There are actually 6 screws to the metal plate in order to get to that 3v battery. If you decide to remove the cover to check the battery, keep the screws in order because 3 of them are shorter than the other three and will not 'grab' if you try to screw a short screw into....well,... just keep them in order. :smile: Inside the battery panel are two wires (blue & black) soldered to the metal plate. Seems a bit fragile so don't pull too hard on the metal plate after removing the last screw. The main purpose of this battery, as I remember it, is mainly as a memory for your settings and film counter when you change the 4 regular AAA batteries. The one in your 'new' camera should be good. :smile:
 
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