TonyB65
Member
I made the mistake of thinking no-one would seriously consider an SLR a "point and shoot"Maybe change the title to NON-SLR point and shoot.

I made the mistake of thinking no-one would seriously consider an SLR a "point and shoot"Maybe change the title to NON-SLR point and shoot.
Looks cool, I like the range, but is it APS?
It's 35mm film.
I made the mistake of thinking no-one would seriously consider an SLR a "point and shoot"![]()
A discussion on RFF about using old RFer's as a P&S--someone adds they use a Nikon F6--hahaha...
Compared to my Canham 14x17, my RZ67 is a point-n-shoot. It's all relative.The definition is becoming so broad you could justify any camera as one, maybe my Pentax 67 qualifies?
I have this one: the Pentax IQZoom 928. 28-90mm, a decent auto-focus, and good exposures.
So I've been enjoying my 280p for all the reasons given above.
However, there's a fly in the ointment. The shutter button on my copy needs a really hard press to fire. So hard that sometimes I'm concentrating more on trying to press the damn thing than composing the image.
I wonder is there any repair I could do to help this, or should I just pick up another copy?
Compared to my Canham 14x17, my RZ67 is a point-n-shoot. It's all relative.
Not really...
I can pre-focus the RZ, set it for Sunny 16, and whang away with it handheld and produce acceptable results. None of the above are true with the 14x17. It takes a good 15 minutes to set up a single shot. Heck, it takes at least 10 of those just to set up the camera! So yes, the RZ is by comparison, a point-n-shoot. Especially if you have the meter prism that lets you shoot aperture preferred.
80s and 90s point and shoots are under-appreciated with the exception of a few names that go for absurd prices. There are some crazy ones out there, I own about 50 at a guess. There's one with a detachable remote, a twin lens model (wide and tele), the Espio 200 (200mm compact!), all kinds of weird stuff designed to entice the casual amateur. Most are unrepairable if anything breaks, so better to pay £5 than £500. Fun items that take surprisingly good photographs in many cases.
Thoughts from the 35MMC site: https://www.35mmc.com/22/01/2019/th...ack-of-cash-on-a-film-camera-read-this-first/
Absolutely. I bought a box of 25 point and shoot film cameras from eBay just a few years ago for £5. 24 of them worked, including a number of quality fixed lens models from Olympus, Canon, Nikon, etc. The cameras were from a charity shop who couldn't give them away. More recently I won a box of 4 for £15, including the excellent XA3, probably my favourite P&S. The price hike in regular compacts is a recent phenomenon, perhaps the last 18 months, but prices are only going one way.I had two of them that I purchased at Goodwill for $4.99 each, but they now sell for as much as $150.00!
I said it was RELATIVELY SPEAKING a point-n-shoot COMPARED TO MY 14x17. I did not say it was a Ricoh GR-1.It's not exactly ticking the boxes as a coat pocketable compact camera with automatic and manual features is it, if you don't understand that I'm not sure what to say.
Absolutely. I bought a box of 25 point and shoot film cameras from eBay just a few years ago for £5. 24 of them worked, including a number of quality fixed lens models from Olympus, Canon, Nikon, etc. The cameras were from a charity shop who couldn't give them away. More recently I won a box of 4 for £15, including the excellent XA3, probably my favourite P&S. The price hike in regular compacts is a recent phenomenon, perhaps the last 18 months, but prices are only going one way.
I stay clear of long range zoom compacts, they're too optically compromised but fine as collectors items. Some short range zooms are the equal or better of fixed lens cameras. Later models had much better autofocus than 1980s varieties. I also avoid cameras with expensive double cell batteries. Don't overlook fixed focus, 3-element or plastic lens cameras, they're not all bad. If it's cheap enough buy it and try it.
This site includes reviews of compact film cameras: https://austerityphoto.co.uk/
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links. To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here. |
PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY: ![]() |