LCDs have a life span. I wonder if ccd, cmos etc. can just suddenly stop working because of their age, or develop thousands of dead pixels. I read somewhere about a digital SLR with a fixed semi-silvered mirror. Canon did that in 35mm with the Pellix and pretty much all of those are unusable because the mirrors aged and the coatings went bad. Parts for digital cameras are very expensive, available for a narrow time window AND in many cases, replacing some parts requires proprietary software from the manufacturer (which many won't make available) to set the camera up. John
I know from personal experience that LCD screens really just sort of crap out. You might have a year or so of limited or random functionality, but after a while they just stop working completely. I'd imagine it's the same with any of the other technologies that make up a digital camera. You'd also have to worry about connectivity many years down the line. My current desktop can't connect (easily) to my first digital camera because the thing was designed to use an Apple serial port. My second one likewise has trouble with my desktop because it writes to floppy disks, and... well, we know how that went.
Film cameras? A friend of mine asked me to fix up his 1903 Kodak "Pocket" camera, and after cleaning some of the optics, I slapped some Ilford MG in there and out came a lovely, contrast-laden image. They stopped making the film back in 1972, but I could have just as easily stuck a sheet of foamboard in there as a mask and used 120 for a faster shot. And the guy who uploaded some pictures of his film coater to Flickr proves, even old film stocks might come back if you find a guy with one of those who might be willing to make you a special 620-format batch or something.
As far as repair is concerned, optics is optics and mechanicals is mechanicals. Somebody with limited training in both can, after reading up about what to do, pop a camera open and do much less harm than good. The weak point would be microprocessors and other fiddly electronic bits, since those are a bit more difficult to diagnose than "Oh, that thing is bent so that other thing won't move."
DIY film coating is a borderline fantasy outside glass plates and is not something I dream fondly of at night.
My take is that the future of film cameras will probably resemble the streets of Fidel's Havana, where Eisenhower-era cars clunk along in varying states of decomposition. How can it really be otherwise?
It should be pointed out that Vivitar makes both a low-end Nikon F100 and a K-mount 135 model, both affordable. They have stepped up to fill a void. How long that will last is anyone's guess.
So, in 20 years time when I drop my F80 and it breaks, will I look on ebay to find there are none left to buy, ... ?
Good post.
Interesting to note after your analogy that I copied is that many of those cars in Cuba have been kept running with non-U.S. parts (largely Soviet). So they are hybrid mishmoshes by now.
Mad Max, Waterworld anyone?
We'll be ok...
Wishful thinking at its finest re: film camera repair.
. . .
The DIY/survivalist urge is a bit misguided when it comes to a mass-produced item, especially an exceedingly complex one like a film SLR. My Minolta X700 suffered the capacitor crap-out that cripples so many of these. Solution? Trashed it. Not worth the bother of fixing it.
. . .
Actually, coating LF film (4x5, 8x10 & etc...) is as easy or easier than coating glass plates.
The future, if film vanishes or film cameras vanish, is with LF and home made film or plates. Besides, good LF cameras are easy to build.
There is some room for MF cameras as well. I have made film coatings for these down to 2x3.
PE
Good post.
Interesting to note after your analogy that I copied is that many of those cars in Cuba have been kept running with non-U.S. parts (largely Soviet). So they are hybrid mishmoshes by now.
Mad Max, Waterworld anyone?
We'll be ok...
All mechanical so somebody, somewhere, should be able to fix them. Should get me through the next 50 years. After that I'll just be thankful I'm still alive.
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