Alex Benjamin
Subscriber
Interesting that many here have focused on how the cameras are made—mechanical vs electronic—and not on the fact that mechanical camera repair as a trade/profession, has not followed the resurgence in film popularity but has essentially become obsolete, with older repairmen retiring and no younger ones to take their place.
Mechanical cameras always broke. Used to be, though, and not that long ago, that in any medium-sized town you had a chance of finding someone who had at least basic knowledge on how a camera worked and could either do simple repair or tell you where to go in a bigger not-too-far town to find someone who could.
If we had the same people today able to do basic repair on mechanical cameras than we had 30 years ago, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Now you have to send it away and suffer long waiting lists not only because there are so few but also because the few that are left have become hyper-specialized, i.e., this guy only does Leica, this guy, Nikon, this guy, Pentax, etc.
Mechanical cameras always broke. Used to be, though, and not that long ago, that in any medium-sized town you had a chance of finding someone who had at least basic knowledge on how a camera worked and could either do simple repair or tell you where to go in a bigger not-too-far town to find someone who could.
If we had the same people today able to do basic repair on mechanical cameras than we had 30 years ago, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Now you have to send it away and suffer long waiting lists not only because there are so few but also because the few that are left have become hyper-specialized, i.e., this guy only does Leica, this guy, Nikon, this guy, Pentax, etc.