agentlossing
Well-known
I really don't know whether to call that optimism or pessimism...Just gave notice to B&H that I ain't buyin' one until they show up on the used market for half price in about a month 😉
I really don't know whether to call that optimism or pessimism...Just gave notice to B&H that I ain't buyin' one until they show up on the used market for half price in about a month 😉
Chuckroast is being a realist.I really don't know whether to call that optimism or pessimism...
I thought this video review was well done.
How many MPs do you see used enough to get brassed. MP & Summaron?..... hands down no question!
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You're welcome. Analog Insight is a great YouTube channel. (How rare it is to say that.) If you go back a way on that channel, they have really good reviews of the OM-1 and Pen S that I imagine you might find interesting.Thanks for this. Good review and good photos.
Seems more like they're being a baby.
Here is another interesting and well balanced (mostly positive) review:
I agree with your reasoning regarding Pentax's desire to introduce a film camera that steers clear of used Pentax 35mm SLR's.Because they didn't want to compete with the three million plus K1000s they already made in the used market. The K1000 was priced at $315 (body only) when it was discontinued in 1997 (Pentax K1000 - Wikipedia). Adjusted for inflation, that works out to about $620 in today's dollars. You can buy a perfectly good K1000 with a lens for around $200 today (less if you're patient or lucky). While you can't compare the price of a brand new camera to a 40 year old used camera, I think at least for this initial offering Pentax needed something that would differentiate the camera from what's available in the used market for one-third the price they would have to sell a new camera for. (And I expect if they recreated the original all-metal K1000 and not the later Chinese-made plastic version it would cost a great deal more than $620. The price of the K1000 when it was introduced in 1976 was $299.50 with a 55mm f/2 lens—that's $1,653.14 adjusted for inflation.)
I'm also unclear on why you would think a 35mm SLR is economically unrepairable. If the camera is not damaged, a routine CLA should get it back up to factory spec at a very reasonable cost. I've had a couple of mine serviced and the cost was in the $75–$150 range.
If you would follow the Pentax 17 development story it is abundantly clear that this was not Pentax's intention.Why try to reinvent the "K1000-type wheel"