
I've had the camera for days waiting on the batteries, and finally get to go shoot it this morning. It looks pretty cool! The red filter may be overkill and darkens the viewfinder a lot, but we're at 100 degrees this weekend in Tucson, so there's plenty of light!
This is not a lightweight camera, although relatively compact, and quite a bit heavier than expected when it has batteries and this particular lens, which is beautifully made. Thankfully it's been AI'D, which made figuring out the camera's accursed menu easier. In many ways the system is similar to the N8008s, it just displays differently. All in all, this is a semi pro camera much like the n8008s, and if the N70 is like those, it will keep shooting for many more years. You can buy these things all day for $15-$20.
I didn't have to dig into the 128 page manual to set things up w/ a MF lens. Program was already selected, so all that remained was to set the film ISO manually and confirm it was in single shot mode. W/ the AE lock, AE is like M but makes the camera faster to shoot.
So far the only negatives have been that the viewfinder isn't high point like my n8008's. That makes seeing the whole frame w/ glasses on not possible. That, and it got awfully heavy w/ the lens mounted, so it may not work for daily outings.
Last edited: