The Hexar AF is a fixed lens AF camera with a hellish sharp 35mm/2 and other nice properties. Still, it is a fixed lens camera with a max 1/250 shutter speed. It can be programmed for a "silent" shutter for the SILVER model while the BLACK model is "silent".
The Hexar RF camera is an M-mount camera with AE and 1/4000 max shutter speed. It has automatic film advance, like the Hexar AF camera.
How do users of either camera feel about their cameras. I am particulalrly interested in features you find as being negative. They may be elusive and not known to others. The positives seem to be plenty with either of these two cameras.
How would you compare the Hexar RF with an M mount Bessa R(.) camera?
Thanks.
I have long thought that RFF should have a Hexar AF forum. The camera is such a piece of work, there's really nothing else like it. I have made this suggestion but nothing has happened and I've gotten no answer. So:
RFF powers that be please consider doing it.
I have a Hexar Rhodium AF, which I think will be the one film camera I will never part with. (Other than its being a beautiful finish there is nothing special about the rhodium except that it came originally programmed for silent mode and so on. However, you have learned that any AF can be programmed for all the features.) I have actually not found the 1/250 speed too much of a problem--I usually shoot Portra 160 or something like that with it, meaning the bright light exposure is still almost always less than 1/250th at f/16.
Its incomprehensible controls are legendary, although once you teach yourself what each of them does, it is a fast camera to operate. I have also had some fun shooting infrared film with it. I admit I was encouraged by the idea that its AF system has an infrared setting, and from that, one thing led to another.
I have an M6TTL that I am equally besotted with, but I can imagine parting with that, on the grounds that it will be replaced with newer Leica Ms, if Leica stays afloat, and I may need to sell it to afford a new M body. No danger of the AF being superseded by a better model!
The AF is probably the one classic fixed-lens RF-like camera that I would recommend to any enthusiastic photographer who doesn't have one. I have others, a Fed and so on and on, but that's because of my damaged DNA. The AF is a very practical and excellent picture taking machine in addition to being a curious photographic artifact.
Tom