sf
Veteran
My D70 died yesterday. It was relatively new too. It just stopped working. Something mechanical wrong with the mirror box, or so they say at Samy's. It will cost as much to fix it as to buy a decent digital P&S - but I will fix it because I will - just because. He says, the average cost is around $300, but that means at least 50% more.
So, thanks to the puny build of the D70, my RF645 will be my only camera when I go to Europe on Sunday- which is a good thing in every respect except for the costs of film. My whimsical shooting will now consume $$$ through the RF. So I bought 12 rolls of film - some PanF, some HP5, and some Delta 3200. No color, because I can print my B&W at home, optically, the old way.
5 weeks for an estimate, says SAmy's, then another couple of weeks to 5 weeks to get the camera back in my hands. That means I will have forgotten digital, and the RF645, through the apparent will of the camera Gods, will earn film photography its place once again.
Bottom line - never trust a digital camera. To the guy that sold me that D70 - I only used it for about 1200 shots, and it died. Thanks. When the D70 returns, I'm selling it and buying a REAL camera.
Maybe this is what I needed - a force of nature to restore the supremacy of film in my daily photographic endeavors.
So, thanks to the puny build of the D70, my RF645 will be my only camera when I go to Europe on Sunday- which is a good thing in every respect except for the costs of film. My whimsical shooting will now consume $$$ through the RF. So I bought 12 rolls of film - some PanF, some HP5, and some Delta 3200. No color, because I can print my B&W at home, optically, the old way.
5 weeks for an estimate, says SAmy's, then another couple of weeks to 5 weeks to get the camera back in my hands. That means I will have forgotten digital, and the RF645, through the apparent will of the camera Gods, will earn film photography its place once again.
Bottom line - never trust a digital camera. To the guy that sold me that D70 - I only used it for about 1200 shots, and it died. Thanks. When the D70 returns, I'm selling it and buying a REAL camera.
Maybe this is what I needed - a force of nature to restore the supremacy of film in my daily photographic endeavors.