I more than disagree with generalization. Sure some will have the problem, good portion held up really well. I have 7 Spotmatics, none had shutter issues, one had seals needing replacement (easy job anyways), perhaps I was just lucky every time. All depends on storage history and there are plenty good to go without any work needed. And these are really sweet shooters too.Spotmatics are great but you need to get it serviced. Light seals guaranteed to be shot. Mirror will stick up. Probably $100-$150 total cost.
You want a meter but I am tired of camera meters and wish for a Pentax Spotmatic SL
Praktica LTL ...have perhaps the best implementation of stop down metering there is.
For sure you do not need to splurge 150 to try out your lenses. Praktica mentioned can be cheap and it was a robust camera (still need to confirm it works fine). Spotmatics from ebay? Spotmatic at ebay.de from Austria, looks nice and there are quite a few more, so no idea what you mean.Thank you all, but now I'm somehow not a step further than before. There are no Spotmatics offered locally atm, so I would have to wait anyway. Thing is, and this applies to all other cameras aswell, if I then go and buy one and in the end it‘s broken again I either would have wasted 30-40€ or would have to go get it fixed. Which lets me think: should I look for a professional store selling refurbished ones and pay, I don‘t know, 150€? Or should I instead get my Fujica ST 801 repaired at such a store and pay maybe less, maybe the same? The 801 is working perfectly and is in pretty good condition exept the broken shutter of course. I really don‘t want to pay that much but before I do trial and error for multiple times maybe and at the end pay the same, this seems to be the better strategy for me.
For sure you do not need to splurge 150 to try out your lenses. Praktica mentioned can be cheap and it was a robust camera (still need to confirm it works fine). Spotmatics from ebay? Spotmatic at ebay.de from Austria, looks nice and there are quite a few more, so no idea what you mean.
The Pentax Spotmatic F is good, light seals can be obtained from a hardware store if you are willing to slice weatherstripping with a box knife blade resting on a couple dimes...
You want a meter but I am tired of camera meters and wish for a Pentax Spotmatic SL
Practically every company made an M42 camera so you will have many choices. Just buy one that is fully functional at the price you are willing to pay for.
I have the Chinon CE II magazine that's in perfect working condition and it has a great advantage of allowing you to use your M42 lenses in aperture priority mode.
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I have Spotmatic, first one I bought was in 1967, still have it, what I like about the Spot is that is basic, nothing to really think about, on the other hand I have the CE and CM II with the motor winder. Both take modern batteries, the metering is very good, as Les says the ability to use aperture priority with any M42 lens is remarkable. The motor winder is not fast 1 1/2 ti 2 FPS and should like a sewing machine, I find it. Downside to the CEII is that long hard push needed to trip the shutter, caused by the meter fixing the shutter speed as the lens is stopped down. The manual exposure version has 3 LED, on the outside of the body on the edge of the viewfinder, sort of odd, works but still odd placement. The Chinon were also sold under the GAF brand.
Does this adapter yield the automatic diaphragm feature?The best camera to use for your selection of M42 lenses is a Contax 139Q with an adapter.
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