Regarding polls, I don't know how and am to lazy to learn.
Exactly, what defines a classic camera, before you can attach a label you need to know what the criteria is.The question remains what makes a camera "classic". Sales figures, being a milestone technically or by market intrusion?
Top sales figures, certainly. It means what most people picked, for what ever reason, and invested their hard earned cash. Cameras that also started trends, that other mfg. followed, such as in 35mm, (Leica?) or first SLR that had any impact in the market, or cameras associated with an event, like the Vietnam war, or most used in the making of news photos. JMHO
SNIP: I nominate the new Canon F1 the first professional film SLR with a hybrid electro-mechanical shutter that works at most of the shutter speeds except the slow ones without a battery if it becomes flat...
The AE-1 showed that the consumer really didn't care if a camera had a plastic top. They just wanted an SLR that would give them good photos and was easy to use. Canon made a bet that paid off. And other camera makers followed suit to the point that nearly all consumer cameras used plastic in their construction. If you look at the entry level cameras of nearly every camera maker, they used plastic bodies, plastic lens barrels and sometimes plastic lens elements. And the average consumer didn't care - and still doesn't care.
Let's not go by sales. If we use that as a criteria, then the Big Mac would win an award for food.
The problem with Leica is that some things in this world are just not worth that much money. It's beyond ridiculous. The prices are not just obscene, they're absurd. Some things I just wouldn't buy if I had Warren Buffet's money, and Leica stuff tops the list. And that loading film from the bottom is just dumb. But I'm sure their great cameras, though. I remember the days when Jaguar was this really premium car--so fine and well made, it spent half it's life in the shop.
Hence my bid for the leicaflex sl. Loads in the back, still works perfectly down to the meter. And it cost me a grand total of $250 - including the summicron 50 f/2.
No Nikon F?One thing is for sure: one man's "classic" is another man's "dog". It is that much subjective.
I've seen many "top 10" and the all mention many different cameras and in many different order. There are, though, some common traits, but it is hard to agree.
So, here is my subjective list with my reasons and in no particular order:
Leica I - the first practical 35mm camera
Contax S - first eye level pentaprism
Asahi Pentax - first successful SLR
Pentax Spotmatic - first SLR with TTL metering using cells in the viewfinder. Became the standard for all SLR.
Olympus OM-1 - first compact SLR where reduction in dimensions and weight were part of the design
Pentax ES - first automatic exposure SLR
Pentax ME (ex aequo with Canon AE-1 and Nikon EM) - Compact SLR "auto-only" for the masses. It rushed a new era of miniature and light weight cameras
Nikon FA - first multi pattern metering.
Minolta 7000 - first practical Auto-focus SLR
Canon EOS650 - first successful SLR with AF motors in the lens. The success of the EOS range was so great that by 2000 all major AF SLR manufactures had follow Canon's example and had models with the same "modus operandi" of command dials and push buttons.
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