What would have been the last all-mechanical medium format camera model that was designed and marketed for professional users?
A conversation with someone who spotted me out with a C330f the other day kind of raised this question in my mind, and now I'm curious what the actual answer would be.
No batteries, no LCD screens, or LEDs, no wiring or chips in the core parts of the system. Just a professional camera that was designed to have film loaded, and everything done with gears, levers, and the like.
[However I guess a sticking point might be things like optional metered viewfinders, and whether those should count. - If there were no electronics that connected the meter to anything else in the camera, then I guess that shouldn't be excluded, but wires to allow the meter to pick up camera settings feels like a failure on the 'all-mechanical' spirit.]
We also might have two possibilities for which camera to declare victor for such a thing, with the last camera model/revision to have been introduced to the market vs the last to have gone out of production?
A conversation with someone who spotted me out with a C330f the other day kind of raised this question in my mind, and now I'm curious what the actual answer would be.
No batteries, no LCD screens, or LEDs, no wiring or chips in the core parts of the system. Just a professional camera that was designed to have film loaded, and everything done with gears, levers, and the like.
[However I guess a sticking point might be things like optional metered viewfinders, and whether those should count. - If there were no electronics that connected the meter to anything else in the camera, then I guess that shouldn't be excluded, but wires to allow the meter to pick up camera settings feels like a failure on the 'all-mechanical' spirit.]
We also might have two possibilities for which camera to declare victor for such a thing, with the last camera model/revision to have been introduced to the market vs the last to have gone out of production?