Merkin
For the Weekend
according to nikon usa, it will cost between 100 and 250 bucks to fix, depending on the severity.
So...are we talking about a problem with the camera's electronics (possible, depending on what the camera has been though before it reached your hands), or is this a problem with the batteries you are putting in it? The frequency of battery replacement you mention is, to put it mildly, quite abnormal. A pair of silver-oxide cells in a properly-working F3 should last the better part of a year, easy. Even the toughest camera can fail if subjected to a high level of abuse/misuse. Best to have it properly looked over.I'm on the minority here telling the negative of F3 but my recently bought F3 brings me troubles since the first day i bought it.
First it eats up battery fast, I mean for one roll I changed batteries 3 times. It turn out that I have bad battery batches from the store. As an Contax IIa (a fully mechanical camera) user I find it frustrating to run out of battery when I'm photographing, it slows things and ruin the momentum. The second problem turn out during a photo session too, the metering is on but the shutter just refuses to shut. :bang:
Now it is on the shop for repair but I'm afraid I dont have the confidence to use it as before.. 🙁
A bit more versatile in the flash department, for certain, but (1) F3Ps are still a good deal more dear than a standard-issue F3 HP, and (2) flash work isn't quite the priority for him with this setup. A relatively clean F3 HP won't beat up the budget too much. One other consideration is that electronic shutters, for all their battery-dependency, are far less likely to require adjustment than their purely-mechanical counterparts; not to knock the F2 (or my M2, for that matter), a good electronic shutter tends to simply stay on-the-money, throughout its shutter-speed range, for quite some time, without fuss. Electronics can be good for something. 😉Better choice is the F3P (then any flash will do) and why not the fully Mechanic F2A or F2AS?
So...are we talking about a problem with the camera's electronics (possible, depending on what the camera has been though before it reached your hands), or is this a problem with the batteries you are putting in it? The frequency of battery replacement you mention is, to put it mildly, quite abnormal. A pair of silver-oxide cells in a properly-working F3 should last the better part of a year, easy. Even the toughest camera can fail if subjected to a high level of abuse/misuse. Best to have it properly looked over.
- Barrett
Lovely lever wind as well. As smooth as a Leica...