chuckroast
Subscriber
I have a GA645Zi that has been pretty much flawless for the 25 years or so I've owned it. EXCEPT ... it eventually developed the dreaded partially dead back door LCD problem they all do, sooner or later because of the flex PC circuit board that wraps around the hinge and into the back.
This isn't complete a showstopper, because you can see exposure info inside the viewfinder, but it does make setting ASA and selecting 120/220 a bit harder.
Fototech in Warsaw has figured out how to fix these with newly minted flex PC circuits but it's an expensive repair. You have to get it there and back and they have to move all the parts off your old bad flex to the new one. All in from the US, it was around $500.
But it's 100% worth it if you like these cameras. I have 11x14 prints taken from negs on that camera that are indistinguishable from Hasselblad images. The lens - albeit a small range zoom - is superb. It's the ultimate travel camera: small, very high quality, and very quiet. You can do "serious" shooting manually, or put it in full auto to have a 120/220 point and shoot.
Here's are some scans of prints made from negative produced on that camera:
https://www.tundraware.com/Photography/Gallery/Silver/media/large/20191230-1-15-LoggedIn.jpg
https://www.tundraware.com/Photography/Gallery/Silver/media/large/20230921-1-10-Nailed_It.jpg
These cameras still sell in the range of $1000-$1500 range used. I bought mine new, gray market, for not a whole lot more than that. So putting $500 into it to get another 20 years out of the camera seemed like a reasonable investment.
This isn't complete a showstopper, because you can see exposure info inside the viewfinder, but it does make setting ASA and selecting 120/220 a bit harder.
Fototech in Warsaw has figured out how to fix these with newly minted flex PC circuits but it's an expensive repair. You have to get it there and back and they have to move all the parts off your old bad flex to the new one. All in from the US, it was around $500.
But it's 100% worth it if you like these cameras. I have 11x14 prints taken from negs on that camera that are indistinguishable from Hasselblad images. The lens - albeit a small range zoom - is superb. It's the ultimate travel camera: small, very high quality, and very quiet. You can do "serious" shooting manually, or put it in full auto to have a 120/220 point and shoot.
Here's are some scans of prints made from negative produced on that camera:
https://www.tundraware.com/Photography/Gallery/Silver/media/large/20191230-1-15-LoggedIn.jpg
https://www.tundraware.com/Photography/Gallery/Silver/media/large/20230921-1-10-Nailed_It.jpg
These cameras still sell in the range of $1000-$1500 range used. I bought mine new, gray market, for not a whole lot more than that. So putting $500 into it to get another 20 years out of the camera seemed like a reasonable investment.
Last edited: