Ian Brett Cooper
Member
Does anyone know where the B-series electronic components were made? The other day I was skimming through some website and I thought I read that they were made in Japan. Then today, I was reading a forum somewhere and someone was saying that Praktica electronic components were bad (which of course made my blood boil) and he/she put it down to shoddy Soviet Bloc tech. I just think that, if they were made in Japan, it would be nice, if anyone makes a similar accusation in the future, to be able to set the record straight.
On a related note, has anyone noticed that Praktica cameras seem to suffer from pretty overt anti-Soviet bias? I mean, I don't think the cameras deserve the bad reputation they seem to have, especially here in the USA. I've even seen some photography articles online that seem almost laughably mired in Cold War propaganda. One example was that a reviewer scorned the Praktica MTL5b, suggesting its lack of electronics was an example of the Soviets not being able to keep up with the West, when the reality was that Praktica had released a fully electronic B200 six years before the MTL5b came onto the market. So it seems to me that the MTL5b was more an example of Praktica seeing value in offering a line of more traditional cameras at a time when everyone else was obsessing over making photography into a digital art form.
Of course, the flipside of the anti-Praktica bias is that it makes it a bit easier to find Praktica products at a low price.
On a related note, has anyone noticed that Praktica cameras seem to suffer from pretty overt anti-Soviet bias? I mean, I don't think the cameras deserve the bad reputation they seem to have, especially here in the USA. I've even seen some photography articles online that seem almost laughably mired in Cold War propaganda. One example was that a reviewer scorned the Praktica MTL5b, suggesting its lack of electronics was an example of the Soviets not being able to keep up with the West, when the reality was that Praktica had released a fully electronic B200 six years before the MTL5b came onto the market. So it seems to me that the MTL5b was more an example of Praktica seeing value in offering a line of more traditional cameras at a time when everyone else was obsessing over making photography into a digital art form.
Of course, the flipside of the anti-Praktica bias is that it makes it a bit easier to find Praktica products at a low price.
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