I'm sharing my nirvana as food for thought.
Manufacturers were trying to reduce their cost by elimination of features, so mirror lockup went away as a standard features except in higher end models. The de-featuring continued until manufacturers discovered that users demanded some things not disappear.How many of those have that? My minolta srt-101 has that, but how many other cameras? This feature was designed out of all Minolta 35mm cameras after the early 70's, but why? I've always though the feature was very important, due my early Pentax 6x7 debacle. Confusion reigns supreme on this.
I have a 101 with Mirror lock up and 202 without, I have not noticed any difference in sharpness between the 2, same with Konica T3 and T4. I think the mirror damping improved to the point that designers thought it not needed. Odd duck is the Sigma SA 7 and 9 late model auto focus bodies has mirror lock up and is easy to use. Too bad they both suffer from the orange glow of death.
That is partly why Minolta removed the mirror lock-up. First, not all SRT 101 c
Precisely. What you said about counterbalancing and dampening also strikes true with me. Not to mention that I expect that the moving part of a mirror assembly of let's say an EOS 3 likely just has less sheer mass than the average mirror from a 1970s SLR. Lighter-weight materials contribute to less shake, evidently.Most relatively modern 35mm SLRs suffer much less from mirror shock
All my 'pro' level bodies have mirror lockup.
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