Aperture Preferred Poll

Aperture Preferred Poll

  • Zeiss Ikon ZM

    Votes: 19 13.4%
  • CV Bessa R*A

    Votes: 13 9.2%
  • Nikon FM3A

    Votes: 17 12.0%
  • Leica M7

    Votes: 27 19.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 74 52.1%

  • Total voters
    142
I like my rangefinders manual but A-mode is what I use most with my 35mm SLR cameras. I'm currently using F100 but I like most Nikons.
 
I used R3A and it worked fine, now I use Mamiya 6 and it is fine too - just one needs to be careful is it is not a TTL metering.

The one in my DLSR (Minolta 7D) works only so-so. The matrix option sucks completely - it underexposes about 1 stop.
 
sorry this is a film poll Keith.


Well ... if I was lucky enough to own an F6 I'd nominate that because it has the same metering system as the D700.

One day I'll have one (F6) ... when the price comes down a little. (or a lot)

😀
 
Well ... if I was lucky enough to own an F6 I'd nominate that because it has the same metering system as the D700.

One day I'll have one (F6) ... when the price comes down a little. (or a lot)

😀
yes that is the probably finest film 35mm SLR ever made if you don't mind the weight.
 
Contax 645, Contax Aria (matrix!), Minolta CLE, Contax G2.

Also, my Leica IIIc is aperture priority, at least, that's what I set first. 🙂
 
Yashica Electro 35X

Yeesh - had to read a page and 1/2 of posts before the KING of AP film cameras was mentioned? Faith in RFF wavered, now restored... Right now my favorite is the Nikon D5000 DSLR (or any modern DSLR Canon, Nikon, Pentax - what have you) nearly always set to "A" mode. I can see all the necessary nfo in the viewfinder and can set the aperture with the thumb wheel, w/o fiddling with on the lens barrel or taking my eye out of the VF to set aperture. The camera does a nice job automatically balancing shutter speed with variable ISO for optimal quality. The aperture ring on the lens barrel is archaic, and the aperture ring is obsolete on lens barrels now. Glad Nikon (not sure if others are too - assume so) are doing away with them on newer lenses.

As a practical matter, I don't see how the older cameras - as wonderful as they are, can compete with these innovations personally.

Used to think DSLRs were more futzy with menus n'all. Now that I've owned one for a while I find them less futzy. Set the menus up, and forget it. Put in "A" mode. Shoot at desired aperture without having to blindly futz with the aperture ring on the lens barrel, or take your eye off the scene to set aperture - all the info is right in the VF. Less futzy.
 
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Yeesh - had to read a page and 1/2 of posts before the KING of AP film cameras was mentioned? Faith in RFF wavered, now restored... Right now my favorite is the Nikon D5000 DSLR (or any modern DSLR Canon, Nikon, Pentax - what have you) nearly always set to "A" mode. I can see all the necessary nfo in the viewfinder and can set the aperture with the thumb wheel, w/o fiddling with on the lens barrel or taking my eye out of the VF to set aperture. The camera does a nice job automatically balancing shutter speed with variable ISO for optimal quality. The aperture ring on the lens barrel is archaic, and the aperture ring is obsolete on lens barrels now. Glad Nikon (not sure if others are too - assume so) are doing away with them on newer lenses.

As a practical matter, I don't see how the older cameras - as wonderful as they are, can compete with these innovations personally.

Used to think DSLRs were more futzy with menus n'all. Now that I've owned one for a while I find them less futzy. Set the menus up, and forget it. Put in "A" mode. Shoot at desired aperture without having to blindly futz with the aperture ring on the lens barrel, or take your eye off the scene to set aperture - all the info is right in the VF. Less futzy.


I find your attitude towards the menu system of DSLR's refreshingly realistic Nick. Everyone uses a PC these days and most of us use them fairly competently ... if you can't navigate your way through the menu system of a DSLR then you don't belong in this century! 😀
 
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