I dont recall the model name or number off the top of my head, but I have a Canon Auto Focus with a 50 1.7....
Canon AF35ML, right? I accidentally bought one of those last week. Crude, nasty camera IMO. Woeful AF. But I'm sure you had a better experience with yours than I have with mine. Fastest lens in any compact, right?
Well reasoned debate, huh? Perhaps you are asking a lot. We are passionate -- even nutty -- about this stuff. Anyway, since I have no idea what a Konica Hexar
AF is...
But I've only been taking photos seriously since 1956...
The secret with older cameras is the condition of the individual camera, not raves by the so-called experts.
I'm
sure this post was helpful somehow. Let's see, Rollei guy born in early 1900s doesn't know what I'm talking about, but thought he would suggest that I've been reading nonsense from so-called experts and therefore something. Geez.
I tried the Hexar myself and found it great. Unfortunately, I find myself priced out of purchasing one right now. Thus my request for user input on an approximate substitute.
Oh...wait...I was confused. Somehow, I was thinking Konica Hexar RF which does have interchangeable lenses and does (last I checked) command a higher price than the Contax G2.
Ah, now the previous post makes sense.
I am really amazed by the lens on my Nikon L35AF. The camera is cheap to find used, has a fixed 35/2.8 (5 element design) that is sharp and flare resistant, ability to add a filter (46mm threads), ability to focus/recompose, built in flash, bright/big viewfinder and quick lever for back light compensation. Though no hexar af by any stretch of the means, the handling and lens performance are top notch. Downside is that it has a noisy film advance. Just so I don't seem biased, I have no less than 3 different Olympus AF's with 35/2.8 (mju, mju II and original AF1) as well as numerous fixed lens rangefinders from various brands. The Olympus' fixed lens AF cams are nice but the Nikon feels more like a real camera in my hands and has given consistently better results (for me).
Great input, Jon. You suggested the #1 and #2 camera candidates I had in mind. First, the Nikon, for all the reasons you listed plus manual ISO settings. I just got one last week, and am about to develop my first roll from it. Shutter button jammed 32 shots in, so this copy may be on the blink. But my analysis says that a good L35AF is probably the closest thing to a "poor man's Hexar".
The runner-up in my mind is the Olympus Stylus Epic you mention. It has a hugely good reputation, and if it's even better than my Infinity Stylus, it seems well deserved. Thanks for sharing your impressions, because I'm definitely considering spending for one.
Indeed. An EOS 3000 with new 40mm pancake for about £100 beats all those cult compacts for flexibility and price. Given the complete lack of parts and servicing support for up-market compacts in C21st, they seem like a risky "investment".
No doubt the EOS is "better" than a compact at plenty of things, but I'm not convinced that's really relevant to someone looking for a compact. I'd suggest there are much nearer approximations of a Hexar substitute than an SLR. And this probably isn't relevant either, but I don't find a 40mm lens to be a good substitute for a 35mm lens AT ALL. But I agree with you… a $300 unserviceable luxury compact is hardly a better buy than a $450-500 Hexar.
The Olympus Stylus Epic could be a candidate...35/2.8...no manual controls though.
Yeah, this is on my radar. I'm weighing it as a possible purchase. Do you have one? Do you like it?
IF you're going to disqualify the Contax G series for having interchangeable lenses
.....
then a Contax T2 or T3 would be a good option.
The Contax Gs are disqualified, not on features, but on price.
The Ts are a
little less than a Hexar.... I was setting my sights quite a bit lower down on the price scale. Those Ts and the Nikon TIs are beautifully crafted cameras.
Another vote for the Shorty McForty (canon 40mm f/2.8 pancake), on any EF body you wish.
I can see Hexar AFs on fleabay going for $300-400 or so, you can even get an EOS 3 with pancake for that.
I'm sure that Canon is a nice lens, and it certainly is small. Use what works for ya, but this really isn't the kind of thing I'm looking for. I'm looking for something of the same "kind" as a Hexar.