Gaspar
Established
The F80 is great, but what I really want is the F100. I agree with Frank, they are such good tools.
The Nikon FM3A has Aperture priority exposure and a manual exposure (so what no big deal) but if the battery becomes drained in the field ALL SHUTTER SPEEDS are available for use. Who else has that?
The Nikon FM3A has Aperture priority exposure and a manual exposure (so what no big deal) but if the battery becomes drained in the field ALL SHUTTER SPEEDS are available for use. Who else has that?
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Let's see now......... Oh! I have.
I get a full range of shutter speeds all the time in my F, F2, two FMs (both recently given to me by ex-film shooters who simply didn't know what else to do with them), my SP and my two S3's.
As Keith was too polite to mention
(But obviously, I'm not)
Olympus was there first...
So the FM3A and Pentax LX pass the test, eh? Aperture priority auto exposure and use of ALL shutter speeds if the battery dies.
The OM-2 does have one clever feature that I'm not sure has been duplicated in other SLR's?
If you forget to turn the camera on before shooting it goes to a default AE setting as soon as you press the shutter button and will meter your scene and adjust shutter speed for you despite the fact that you managed to forget. I quite often overlook changing the switch from off to on before I shoot but could never work out why I was still getting decent exposures on those frames.
Does any other camera do this?
Now Keith, you must have known you would hear from me that the ST 901 beat Olympus on that too, right? But you have me on that one.
Actually, it is always interesting to me some of the differenct design philosophies of the camera manufacturers. The ST 901 only came on when you depressed the shutter, so it only came "on" when needed. That presented a possible problem that it could be depressed in a camera bag or anywhere that something pressed on the shutter, running down the battery. So they put a collar around the shutter button that could be rotated and the shutter button locked. In case you forgot to do that, but had the camera in the case, there was a hardened, built up portion, in the upper part ot the case to pretect the shutter from being depressed.
Others simple put an on/off switch somewhere on the camera. Olympus cleverly allowed the meter to come on when needed. Is it protected in any way?