Cooltouch your camera collection could be a camera store it seems like.
I just have too much photographic equipment but I get my calm from having it all around me...
Listen to me - we're not making film anymore. We're not making film cameras anymore. When I'm elected President, all that is going to change. You know what? I'm going to have Kodak make Kodachrome again and they're going to thank me for it. I'm going to make film great again. Fuji is discontinuing peel-apart instant film - well, when I'm President that's not going to happen. We send billions of dollars to Japan - the cars, the electronics - huge amounts of money. Believe me: Fuji is going to be making FP-100C for a long time. When I'm President, the film and film camera industry is going to be huge. Absolutely.
Iunderstand the feeling;first you pay top dollar for it.Then you are being asked to practically give it away and even made work to do so;send me a list;can I see some pictures;can you ship for free;I hate being taken advantage of;nobody wants the crap enough to pay for it.I guess most would surmise I have far too much crap. Many years of buying/selling but buying more than I sold because the really good deals were tough to pass up. Literally dozens of old Graflex cameras just laying around collecting dust because I have a somewhat difficult time cleaning, photographing, listing, selling, shipping. I quit selling for several years due to a neurological issue and also because the bottom fell out of the market after 9/11. I finally started selling again about three years ago when I could no longer work and bring home a paycheck... that was after a year of living off of my decimated 401K. I need to set up a schedule to list at least one relatively valuable thing per week or several small items per week. Even then I don't think I could ever be rid of it all.
The funny thing is I want to keep nearly none of this stuff and I'm literally stumbling over things I don't need or want. It's just a bit of a challenge for me these days to get much of anything done, even very easy tasks. Anyway, that's my stoopid excuse/story and I'm stickin' to it!!
Frank, an 81 R100 is a nice bike indeed. Which flavor is it?
Nolan, the Airhead boxers are timeless classics.
I think having lots of cameras is a bit like being a horologist, as instead of being surrounded by time and its passing, you are surrounded by cameras and their potential to capture multiple moments in time. Even though you can't use them all at once.
I just have too much photographic equipment but I get my calm from having it all around me, which drives my wife nuts.Getting rid of it is not an option(I love it too much) and most of it was bought from money painfully saved up to get the 'best' I could afford.Recently, my wife made a suggestion I could possibly live withut a selection together for each format such as you most loved 35mm with a set of the most likely used lenses.TREAT THAT LIKE GOLD OR EVEN DISPLAY IT IN A Glass cupboard and just get rid of the rest.Do the same for 6x6 and 4x5 and a lighting kit and enjoy all the freed up space. Has anybody done something like that?What do you think? Is it enough to still enjoy the equipment with the pride of ownership,cut down on maintenance, required CLAs and have working equipment around when you need it?
everyone loves them until at 90,000 miles you have to replace the timing belt or have the high mileage problem they all seem to have~ warped head on the drivers side.Well I have a 2015 Subaru Forrester with a boxer engine. So far the car is great.
Well timing belts are regular maintenance and you just get it done when it's time. Same with tires, brakes and the rest. I will let you know in about 10 years how the car held up. The same with my FM2n that I just had repaired and serviced. About 10 years should tell the story on it's reliability.everyone loves them until at 90,000 miles you have to replace the timing belt or have the high mileage problem they all seem to have~ warped head on the drivers side.
Timing chains wear out and should be regularly checked. Also if the oil in not changed on the recommended schedule, the timing chain stretches and then snaps bending the push rods and valve stems.
Any mechanic will tell you that all timing chains can stretch. The automobile manufactures order their parts from the same source. For example most push rods and valve stems are made by TRW.
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