kshapero
South Florida Man
Leica M10 Monochrom vs Kodak Tri-X 400: B&W Digital vs Film
Pipe in on this one.
Pipe in on this one.
Sorry, I wasn't trying to be negative. You did say "pipe in" ... 🙄Aw, Bill, Feeling a bit harsh are we? ...
All good, brother:angel:Sorry, I wasn't trying to be negative. You did say "pipe in" ... 🙄
Have a Nikon FM and Nikkor 50/1.8 lens with Tri-X and I am also set. Paid $155 for the setup.
Have a Nikon FM and Nikkor 50/1.8 lens with Tri-X and I am also set. Paid $155 for the setup.
... and you all complain and bemoan the fact that there are no new comparable quality film cameras on the market today.
That Nikon FM and Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 lens, new in 1978, would cost about $275 for the body and about $150 for the lens. I know because I bought them then. In today's money, call it $1150 for the body and $650 for the lens.
That's still quite a bit less than a new Leica M-A + Summicron-M 50mm—one of the last quality film cameras still in production, $8090—but the price differential is pretty much the same as it was in 1978 (about 4x more for the Leica M gear compared to the Nikon FM).
If you're not willing to buy new gear and actually generate some profit for a camera manufacturer—remember that the manufacturers make nothing from the sales of used gear—then the manufacturers go out of business.
So I'm happy you got a decent camera and lens for virtually nothing. I've done the same, many times, in recent years. But it's nothing to be proud about: it's simply a fact that this is why no one is making high quality film cameras any more.
Do you need that Leica M at the 4x price difference to make great photos? Of course not. But many felt that the qualities of the Leica M were/are worth it, which is the basis of something called the "RangeFinder Forum", eh? 🙄
G
note Oh yes: as I said before, the suggested video comparison is essentially contentless. That is, without any substantive information from which to draw any conclusions at all.