The FM3A is a great camera also but I do not want another electronic camera. I know it has a mechanical mode but still it's filled with electronics that I do not want at the present time. It kind of boggles the mind how they squeezed 2 camera's inside the little body.
This is what I mean by the
FM3A possibly being the most misunderstood and underestimated camera ever....
It is not an electronic camera. If you take the battery out and use a handheld meter, just like you can an FM2, it will make photos longer than you will be alive, just like an FM2. However, if you put the battery in it, just like an FM2, it will now have a meter in manual mode, just like an FM2. But when you switch it to "A", it now has aperture priority with step-less shutter speeds, AE lock, TTL flash exposure compensation button, unlike an FM2. All the PCB boards are double sealed, the lubes used are with extreme cold in mind. It has better gearing, a better shutter and much better meter than either the FM2 or FE2, works incredibly good well into the minutes & even with using "A" over half the time, the battery just lasts forever.
And if for some reason decades from now, the little electronics it has in it do fail....it will keep right on making photos for the rest of your life. But they won't fail, because they made this camera for National Geographic photographers to take where batteries are hundreds of miles away, big cameras are a huge liability and getting the shot is a matter of life and death.
Trust me, I have used Nikon cameras to make possibly over a million photos in my 28 year career, the FM3A is the one to beat, everything you need and nothing you don't. It's the last camera I would ever get rid of, over all my nikons, my Leicas, Hasselblads, 4x5, etc.
$650 is a bit high, prices have come down now and I see them for around $400-$450, a total bargain when you consider what it is.