Alan Edward Klein
Member
Interesting discussion. So I had a couple of pretty terrible repair experiences over the past year. The main one was a repair odyssey involving my beloved, and still broken to this day, Minolta Autocord (I will write a separate post about this - but thank you very much for nothing at all, Sandro Presta).
Anyhow - I'm at the point I can't be arsed anymore. I just want to take pictures and not wait 8 months without my camera and then regularly spend its value worth in repairs every couple of years or so.
So I'm more and more leaning towards my trustworthy, plasticky, unloved by many, electronic 90s cameras. I have a few that just keep ticking and ticking like a Casio watch. Are they pretty? Kind of, who cares? Do they do what's on the tin? IME yea, unfailingly so.
So off I go with my N90s, F301, Fuji GA645i. Some ugly ducklings I spent respectively $50 $30 and $400 to purchase, and which are giving me results I will treasure for years. And they keep working, and working and working.
'But, Batteries"! - I can buy them cheap off amazon, and they'll last for years
Electronics will fail! - I will dump the whole camera and buy another one. In fact I have a few backup bodies aligned.
But they look like modern digital cameras so nobody will know you're shooting film - happy with that
But the beauty of the manual controls is lost! - love manual controls and TLR ergonomics, so I suppose I will have to live with this compromise.
Long live unrepairable 90s Japanese electronics![]()
My Nikon N6006 electronic 35mm from 35 years ago works like a champ. I checked the electronic shutter and all settings are accurate. Pretty amazing. All the features work flawlessly including the metering, PASM, bracketing, auto-focus, auto rewind, etc. I hadn't used it in years than recently I loaded some Tmax 400 and got great results.
