pen s
Member
I too have never lost a shot due to a dead camera battery in 62 years of photography, and five of my current cameras use them. I don't understand why so many photographers (most of them amateurs) seem to have such a pathological fear of their camera batteries failing I always check the voltage of batteries in the cameras I'm taking with me with a multimeter before leaving the house, and always carry new spares, as for the Nikon F3 many thousands
of the Worlds professionals have managed to make a living with them for more than twenty years so they can't be so bad, I suggest the O.P. just carries spare batteries with him at all times and quits worrying.
The very nature of illogical fears are that they are....well illogical. But I sure like my mechanically timed cameras, some of which do not have meters at all. As to the reliability of electronically timed cameras well yes, quite a few are very robust and the circuts last for years. The early ones seem to be the best with the least troubles. In my OM system the OM-2 and OM-2n have the best reputation. Later OM-4 and 2Sp models had some samples with excessive battery drain even when not in use.
I do have one electronic camera, a used OM-2Sp. It came to me as a back cap for a Zuiko I wanted. The salesman said that any batteries they put in it hardly lasted a week. By being carefull I could get 2 or 3 months. It sat around for a year and just for something to do I built a 'L' bracket that held 2 AAA batteries and rigged the camera to use these. I thought it didn't care how the little beastie got it's 3v. Those first set of batteries lasted 3 years and I can use the camera if I want to but I just don't like the feel of the thing. The wind on has a funny 'hump' in it, not smooth like my OM-1 bodies.
No, I don't use cameras for a living. If I did I'm sure it would be one of those cameras, the ones that start with the dirty 'D' word.