E. von Hoegh
Member
Why does that camera have a chrome baseplate??Hey hey "selling first born" - can you just tell at what pricing (around) your mind condition f2 was and at what year?
with regards
PS : By the way "real mint" to me is a relative term. Some say:" this F2 I can offer you is real mint but you have to know it is a camera of an age > 40 years.
That is the condition Theo showed.
You have little scratches onto camera surface and mostly black color is a little damaged.But that is meanwhile a very rare and expansive condition.
"Real mint is the same as new - not a single little scratch a.s.o. like this :
View attachment 197245
(No worry it is not mine - so burglars pls. don't come over)
Also, how can the term "mint condition" apply to anything other than a coin?
I purchased an F2a body here from the classifieds. When it arrived, it turned out to be a late '71 body with a dp11 finder; the body is beautiful with only the lightest few marks on the baseplate, otherwise spotless and was clean as a whistle with new foam, the shutter is dead accurate; the dp11 has had considerably more experience but also immaculately clean and accurate. Cost $100 shipped. This one's worth getting the eyelevel prism for.
Last September I was given another F2a, very late production, black with very slight brassing but had sat without a lens and the mirror box was full of dust, also the top right corner was dented and the mlu didn't raise the mirror all the way. But the meter is good, the shutter will be fine after an overhaul (it's useable now, but the highest speeds are off). Also it came with a Beattie Intenscreen which is absolutely useless.
So that's where two of them are, one gem and one that might have sold for $25 but will be just as good as the gem when I finish with it.
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