Ricoh FF-90, FF-90 Super
Ricoh FF-90, FF-90 Super
Thanks for the information Bill (
chubasco)! I'll have to try that trick using CR123A batteries in the lithium battery casing.
😀
I was poking around on the Internet and came up with a couple of blurbs I thought I should share:
Popular Science August 1985:
"The Ricoh FF-90 was designed, says Ricoh vice-president Ray Ohannes, to offer "the best that modern technology can provide." It's hard not to believe him. The first thing you see when you hold an FF-90 is its huge liquid-crystal-display control panel. It tells you (after the FF-90 has read, on loading, the DX code that most films now have and has automatically set its exposure system for the film speed):
- The number of exposures in the cartridge - 12, 24, or 36.
- The number of the exposure you're up to right now.
- Film speed (ISO).
- Whether you've set the camera for backlight compensation (a +2 signal lights up).
- Whether the film has fed properly into the camera.
- Whether the lens cover is open.
- And finally, when you've taken the last shot, that the film is now - automatically - being rewound"
Small push buttons on the deck next to the control panel enable you to set film speed manually, if you choose; to compensate for backlight; to get into the picture yourself; or to light up the whole control panel. Naturally, this is an auto-everything camera: focus, film advance, film rewind, and flash (the flash pops up in dim-light conditions). Several features set the FF-90 apart from other autofocus lens-shutter cameras (as these 35's are classified): It has a faster lens (f/2.8 vs. f3.5); its shutter-speed range extends from 1/500 to two seconds; it accepts film with exposure indexes from 25 to 1,600; and its autofocusing is continuous - stepless - rather than bound by zones. List price $240."
Chicago Sun-Times June 26, 1987:
"Ricoh has introduced two new cameras and upgraded its FF-90, calling the revision the FF-90 Super. The basic changes are a lithium battery power source that the user can replace, the ability to be operated by remote control with a variety of electronic devices and refined styling.
Another nice feature gives the user the ability to override the ISO setting with DX coding. The suggested list price for the FF-90 Super is $287, including a 35mm f2.8 lens. The data-back version, available shortly, will go for $333."
-Dave