S
scottmcl
Guest
Sorry for beginning with an equipment "dump," but it's germane to my current quandry.
I've been shooting RF cameras for about 2.5 years. I started out with a Bessa R and a 50/2.5. Over the years, I've added two M6TTL bodies (a .72 and a .58) along with several lenses: CV 21/4, 35/2.5 LTM Pancake, 50/1.5 and Leica 28/2, 50/2 and 90/2.8 (all current). I also have a little SF24 flash, and various accessories.
I also built up an FM3a based kit, with 28/2.8 AIS, 45/2.8 AI-P, 105/2.5 AIS and 135/2.8 AIS. I built up this kit for the relative economy and good quality of the two longer Nikon lenses, but just "couldn't resist" the 28 and 45 🙂
I also shoot a Nikon D70, and have some AF lenses: 12-24/4 DX zoom, 24/2.8, 35/2, 50/1.8, 85/1.8.
Various Nikon accessories including an SB800 flash, Wein Safe Sync for using my studio strobes, Stroboframe flash brack, reversal ring, etc.
So my quandry is how many 135 film camera systems am I going to support alongside digital, and a hopefull foray into MF and LF film shooting?
Lately, I found Ive been picking up the FM3a kit instead of the Leica M kit, and increasingly I appreciate its virtues. The FM3a is a small SLR body with a great feature set - DOF preview, multiple exposure, nice focusing screen (but interchangeable), high flash sync and top shutter speed, TTL flash, easy bounce flash with the SB800, shutter and apperture display in the VF and so on.
The FM3a + 45 is about as small, maybe smaller, than the M6 + 50/2. It's as much the perfect "one lens carry around kit." The AIS lenses are larger than their Leica counterparts, but a 3 AIS lens kit fits into the same small domke satchel I use for my Leica M kit.
The FM3a and AIS lenses seem perfectly sturdy feeing, and at their price point, they are less "precious" than the M Kit. I also really like the AIS lenses I currently shoot, each an excellent performer in its own way.
I'm not fond of the 105/2.5 wide open (vs. the Leica 90/2.8), so that's a shortcoming. Also, I do NOT have any fast lenses in my AIS kit, but the advent of the new ZF lenses presents an attractive opportunity to round out my FM3a kit with a few high quality and faster f1.4 lenses - including a presumably good 85/1.4 short tele with decent wide open performance. I don't know how Nikon's 20mm lens compares to my CV 21/4.
So I'm wondering, could the FM3a SLR with a few Zeiss lens additions and the purchase of a 2nd FE2, FM3a or FM2n backup body actually be a better 135 film camera system than my Leica M RF system? As sturdy, more flexible, near equivalent or equivalent optical quality, less expensive in total and so on?
And of course, there is a nice overlap between the FM3a system and the Nikon DSLR cameras, particularly if I get a D200 (which meters nicely with AIS lenses) should Nikon come around to really FIXING the banding problem once and for all.
Selling off my M gear should fund the FM3a system "upgrades" with money left over to spare.
I do like shooting with my M bodies, and the lenses leave little to be desired. But again, I wonder how many 135 film systems are worth keeping, shooting, enhancing and so on. I'm not a collector, I'm a shooter. So I don't get a kick of having oodles of different 135 film camera systems sitting on the shelves.
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Scott
I've been shooting RF cameras for about 2.5 years. I started out with a Bessa R and a 50/2.5. Over the years, I've added two M6TTL bodies (a .72 and a .58) along with several lenses: CV 21/4, 35/2.5 LTM Pancake, 50/1.5 and Leica 28/2, 50/2 and 90/2.8 (all current). I also have a little SF24 flash, and various accessories.
I also built up an FM3a based kit, with 28/2.8 AIS, 45/2.8 AI-P, 105/2.5 AIS and 135/2.8 AIS. I built up this kit for the relative economy and good quality of the two longer Nikon lenses, but just "couldn't resist" the 28 and 45 🙂
I also shoot a Nikon D70, and have some AF lenses: 12-24/4 DX zoom, 24/2.8, 35/2, 50/1.8, 85/1.8.
Various Nikon accessories including an SB800 flash, Wein Safe Sync for using my studio strobes, Stroboframe flash brack, reversal ring, etc.
So my quandry is how many 135 film camera systems am I going to support alongside digital, and a hopefull foray into MF and LF film shooting?
Lately, I found Ive been picking up the FM3a kit instead of the Leica M kit, and increasingly I appreciate its virtues. The FM3a is a small SLR body with a great feature set - DOF preview, multiple exposure, nice focusing screen (but interchangeable), high flash sync and top shutter speed, TTL flash, easy bounce flash with the SB800, shutter and apperture display in the VF and so on.
The FM3a + 45 is about as small, maybe smaller, than the M6 + 50/2. It's as much the perfect "one lens carry around kit." The AIS lenses are larger than their Leica counterparts, but a 3 AIS lens kit fits into the same small domke satchel I use for my Leica M kit.
The FM3a and AIS lenses seem perfectly sturdy feeing, and at their price point, they are less "precious" than the M Kit. I also really like the AIS lenses I currently shoot, each an excellent performer in its own way.
I'm not fond of the 105/2.5 wide open (vs. the Leica 90/2.8), so that's a shortcoming. Also, I do NOT have any fast lenses in my AIS kit, but the advent of the new ZF lenses presents an attractive opportunity to round out my FM3a kit with a few high quality and faster f1.4 lenses - including a presumably good 85/1.4 short tele with decent wide open performance. I don't know how Nikon's 20mm lens compares to my CV 21/4.
So I'm wondering, could the FM3a SLR with a few Zeiss lens additions and the purchase of a 2nd FE2, FM3a or FM2n backup body actually be a better 135 film camera system than my Leica M RF system? As sturdy, more flexible, near equivalent or equivalent optical quality, less expensive in total and so on?
And of course, there is a nice overlap between the FM3a system and the Nikon DSLR cameras, particularly if I get a D200 (which meters nicely with AIS lenses) should Nikon come around to really FIXING the banding problem once and for all.
Selling off my M gear should fund the FM3a system "upgrades" with money left over to spare.
I do like shooting with my M bodies, and the lenses leave little to be desired. But again, I wonder how many 135 film systems are worth keeping, shooting, enhancing and so on. I'm not a collector, I'm a shooter. So I don't get a kick of having oodles of different 135 film camera systems sitting on the shelves.
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Scott