All they need to do is reverse engineer any successful film camera, and that takes care of any "lost" knowledge, it would be right there in front of them. It really isn't rocket science, these things were perfected eons ago.
It would be great if it actually happens, although I don't know why they need to go through all these different models to get to a mechanical camera. All they need to do is reverse engineer any successful film camera, and that takes care of any "lost" knowledge, it would be right there in front of them. It really isn't rocket science, these things were perfected eons ago.
Maybe - but maybe not. A film camera sure isn't rocket science, but still, if you look at your average product development process in the manufacturing industry, it's always a couple of processes happening at the same time. There's the product development track, but there's also process development, underlying technology development and of course the various administrative and strategic processes in the business area. The more technical processes ultimately manifest themselves in the tangible product, but you can't always reconstruct them entirely based on just the resulting product. So recreating a product, even with today's more advanced technology, is likely going to involve a couple of moments of "how the heck did they do that", as well as a few "why on earth did they do it this way" to be followed with some instances of "oh, now I see..." a couple of prototypes later. Keep in mind also that the product you make is influenced by the (im)possibilities of manufacturing technology, so studying a product from let's say 40 years ago can involve a couple of riddles that make perfect sense if you know the nature of the manufacturing processes at the time.
And that's not even addressing the obvious issue of the present generation of engineers likely never having been bothered by questions of how to handle film in a camera. There's likely a couple of particularities in this, which were all figured out a couple of decades ago, and that can only indirectly and partly be implied from studying a particular camera.
Long story short, I think it's certainly helpful to involve a couple of old geezers in a project like this as it'll likely progress a lot faster that way.
I think it's an interesting exercise; over the years, I've talked to hundreds of people involved in the manufacturing industry (many different domains, functions, types of organizations) and one of the common occurrences is that we forget yesterday's technology nearly as fast as we introduce new innovations.
Add to it the fact that sometimes vendors go out of business, and with them goes much of their product knowledge.
Indeed. And in the case of firms like Pentax, this is even more complicated. Much of the component production must have been done in-house when the mostly mechanical cameras of yesteryear were produced, with part of the manufacturing being done outside the firm, likely as much as possible within the keiretsu Pentax was at that moment part of - which I suspect is the same Fuyo group they're part of as a Ricoh brand today. Anyway, those fine mechanics manufacturing shops are likely nearly entirely gone by now, leaving only a small prototyping capacity. Any mechanical manufacturing will have to be outsourced, which means that supplier development must take place. A complicating factor is that this will likely involve the inherently conflicting requirements of low volumes and high quality requirements, which equals consequences such as expensive, prone to delays/disruptions etc. The landscape of small component manufacturing is entirely different today from what it was when let's say the K1000 was made. This will have huge consequences for how the product will have to be designed; engineering choices that made perfect sense in 1970 or so would be impossible today - and vice versa. So this is another reason why reverse engineering an existing product can be educational at a conceptual level, but it doesn't remove the need to engineer the product as a brand new one from the ground up.
no new cameras made that way had been introduced in a long time, and that was with the FM2 still in production!
It would be great if it actually happens, although I don't know why they need to go through all these different models to get to a mechanical camera. All they need to do is reverse engineer any successful film camera, and that takes care of any "lost" knowledge, it would be right there in front of them. It really isn't rocket science, these things were perfected eons ago.
Having worked in marketing and market research, I know if this is true they've already run the numbers based on expected sales to which demographics, and to what price range.
We'll see, I'm not from Missouri, but have their same idea of show me.
I'm waiting for Pentax, or any of the big guys, to give us a full frame digital sensor that can be easily retrofit into existing film cameras. The sensor could go in the film plane, and the electronics and battery in the film compartment. No display screen, and limited settings, due to size and power constraints, but that sort of matches the film ethic too. If they plan on making a new SLR, then why not something that could easily do both film and digital via an easy back swap. A stripped down 70's styling seems to be what people want these days, so why not something that can do both film and digital with that same mindset?
I'd gladly pay a grand to get a digital sensor that could fit in my film cameras. This would give me the freedom to shoot with both digital and film, using something I'm already comfortable with. Some medium format cameras used to offer this ability, but most of them have gone out of business now, or are out of any realistic pricing for the average person.
Young people that want to try film are clearly looking for something different from the instant gratification you get from a cell phone. Bring back the magic of discovery by eliminating display screens and forcing people to think about what they're trying to capture, instead of just clicking at anything.
C'mon, Pentax, give this ol' geezer the goods!
It would be great if it actually happens, although I don't know why they need to go through all these different models to get to a mechanical camera. All they need to do is reverse engineer any successful film camera, and that takes care of any "lost" knowledge, it would be right there in front of them. It really isn't rocket science, these things were perfected eons ago.
Having worked in marketing and market research, I know if this is true they've already run the numbers based on expected sales to which demographics, and to what price range.
We'll see, I'm not from Missouri, but have their same idea of show me.
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