I've been thinking about this a while and this may be blasphemous but... is there a known reason why a Copal Square-like design wasn't used on the F2? It would have given MUCH better flash performance, especially with bulbs, as M bulbs can sync with such shutters at all speeds. An X-sync speed of 1/125th may not be a full stop better than the F2's 1/70th (?) but in daylight for flash fill it can be nice to have that extra little bit.
Now, the F2 doesn't exactly lack in reliability (some would call it one of the most reliable mechanical SLR's ever made) but I will say that more than one person I've met said they damaged the foil curtains with an errant film leader. This wouldn't have happened with a design similar to the Nikkormat's shutter.
Plus, Nikon were literally one of the very first adopters of that technology when they contracted with Mamiya to make the Nikkorex F, the very first SLR with a Copal Sauare shutter, that ran alongside the Nikon F as their first budget SLR and a key predecessor to the Nikkormat.
So is there any reason they went with foul horizontally-moving curtains, beyond the dogma that orthodox technologies are safer?
Now, the F2 doesn't exactly lack in reliability (some would call it one of the most reliable mechanical SLR's ever made) but I will say that more than one person I've met said they damaged the foil curtains with an errant film leader. This wouldn't have happened with a design similar to the Nikkormat's shutter.
Plus, Nikon were literally one of the very first adopters of that technology when they contracted with Mamiya to make the Nikkorex F, the very first SLR with a Copal Sauare shutter, that ran alongside the Nikon F as their first budget SLR and a key predecessor to the Nikkormat.
So is there any reason they went with foul horizontally-moving curtains, beyond the dogma that orthodox technologies are safer?