The standard excuse/explanation/argument against a RFd is that the market is too small [to justify the R&D necessary].
The truths are:
- The future film-user market will be even smaller...just ask any film manufacturer.
- M-mount lens owners, from Leica to Konica to Voigtlander are all potential customers...so long as a new RFd body price premium is not excessive.
Developing a digital camera is a bullet manufacturers must bite...just ask Konica, Minolta, Contax (Kyocera), Yashica, even ailing Pentax... Waiting for technology to become available is a lame cop out...
are you listening Carl Zeiss?
Debating what should be on a RFd is useless...we all have personal preferences. I for one would have gladly bought [and had even offered to finance/contribute in the development] a "digital retrofit" package for my trusty mechanical Nikon's:
Remove the pressure plate and cut a window to mount the sensor package at film plane, place the battery in the film supply cavity and mount a CD or micro CD chip and circuit board where the film take up spool sits... Firmware is available over the Internet.
[A recent D3X cutaway picture shows the full-frame sensor package a mere 5~6mm thick, the circuit another 2mm and the LCD ~10mm.]
You couldn't be far wrong if you assume the CCD chip is a slide film rated at ISO-125 and just bracket... The extra
bits in CCD is like film latitude...applied it in post-processing to even out lens vignetting or boosting shadow details, for now.
Film cost, processing and scanning [or equipment/material costs in DIY] amounts to ~$1 per shot in my locale. Spending an extra $1000 in a digital camera premium [or a retrofit] is merely prepaying recurring cost for life [of the camera]. Besides, not mindful of film/processing cost while shooting is liberating.
I have long advocated turning a LCD or Plasma TV into a revolving/changing gallery [been doing that for years]. No printing necessary. Pay for an occasional 300dpi high-resolution print is not a hardship.
Now that the HDTV age is here, you WILL have a 1080p display soon...or someone in your household will nag you to death.
A picture unseen is a picture lost...why bother photographing if you cannot share it.