kshapero
South Florida Man
nice score, William.Family portrait. Considering that on Dec 1, 2010, I didn't own anything with the Nikon name on it...![]()
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:angel:
William
dacookieman
Cookie Monster
The twin OMs...

DanOnRoute66
I now live in Des Moines
I take it that's a non-MD OM-1, dacookieman?
dacookieman
Cookie Monster
I take it that's a non-MD OM-1, dacookieman?
Can't say for sure its a Non-MD as there is a hole for where the motordrive is to be attached.
kidpluto
Established
kdemas
Enjoy Life.
One of the few SLRs I've sold that I really miss. Sold two of them, stupidly.

menos
Veteran
One of the few SLRs I've sold that I really miss. Sold two of them, stupidly.
Is it that good? Even by todays options still valid as a digital camera?
I shortly investigated, finding a second hand one with lenses, but gave up on the idea with prices, fit and feel of the Contax N film camera (plasticky, light, …) and endless questions regarding reliability, longevity, repair, service etc.
After all, these are very expensive cameras @ todays second hand prices.
It is a beautiful camera at least ;-)
Greyscale
Veteran
My first "big boy" Nikon:

kdemas
Enjoy Life.
Menos...some excellent questions. It definitely is still valid as a digital camera today, with some serious caveats (many of which applied even when it was released).
The ND was, for me, mainly a portrait and still life camera. The auto-focus, though actually pretty sophisticated, was slow relative to CaNikon and also didn't focus track real well. Long and short, not a good rig for sports or action.
The body was actually a unique Kevlar impregnated material which was quite tough. The build was excellent, prompting many friends to comment that "they don't build them like this anymore". They sure don't (Contax is gone joke).
Weaknesses... Autofocus for all Ns were often miscalibrated out of the box, luckily my ND's did not suffer from this. Want to preview your raw images on the rear LCD, sorry..you're out of luck. Buffer was too small, batteries were gobbled up quickly.
So what did I like? Fantastic ergonomics. Nice finder. Huge, massive photo sites (only 6M) gave great DR. And then, the lenses. Zeiss went all out, and the 85mm may have been the finest lens I have owned, and I have owned many.
Long and short, an interesting camera capable of incredible images, but only capable in very limited conditions and situations.
Time for a drink!
Kent.
The ND was, for me, mainly a portrait and still life camera. The auto-focus, though actually pretty sophisticated, was slow relative to CaNikon and also didn't focus track real well. Long and short, not a good rig for sports or action.
The body was actually a unique Kevlar impregnated material which was quite tough. The build was excellent, prompting many friends to comment that "they don't build them like this anymore". They sure don't (Contax is gone joke).
Weaknesses... Autofocus for all Ns were often miscalibrated out of the box, luckily my ND's did not suffer from this. Want to preview your raw images on the rear LCD, sorry..you're out of luck. Buffer was too small, batteries were gobbled up quickly.
So what did I like? Fantastic ergonomics. Nice finder. Huge, massive photo sites (only 6M) gave great DR. And then, the lenses. Zeiss went all out, and the 85mm may have been the finest lens I have owned, and I have owned many.
Long and short, an interesting camera capable of incredible images, but only capable in very limited conditions and situations.
Time for a drink!
Kent.
Is it that good? Even by todays options still valid as a digital camera?
I shortly investigated, finding a second hand one with lenses, but gave up on the idea with prices, fit and feel of the Contax N film camera (plasticky, light, …) and endless questions regarding reliability, longevity, repair, service etc.
After all, these are very expensive cameras @ todays second hand prices.
It is a beautiful camera at least ;-)
menos
Veteran
Kent, I am very curious about this camera still (limiting factor being the steep prices and low availability).
I find it a shame also, that many lenses have been slaughtered and converted to Canon mount, driving also prices up (especially the wide zoom and 85mm it seems).
One has to be quite committed or well heeled, to tip toe into the unfortunately discontinued Contax SLR territory.
I find it a shame also, that many lenses have been slaughtered and converted to Canon mount, driving also prices up (especially the wide zoom and 85mm it seems).
One has to be quite committed or well heeled, to tip toe into the unfortunately discontinued Contax SLR territory.
2WK
Rangefinder User
iPhone pic of the little collection.
M6 is the newest addition, can u guess the rest?
M6 is the newest addition, can u guess the rest?

hans voralberg
Veteran
iPhone pic of the little collection.
M6 is the newest addition, can u guess the rest?
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From left to right:
OM1/2 with MD
Nikon F100 with grip
Nikon F100
Nikon F4
Looks like a Canon 5D or 1D but I'm not sure
M6
Canon P&S
Let's see how many I got right
kdemas
Enjoy Life.
Menos,
They have stayed quite expensive and you're right, the prime lenses are hard to come by. Specifically the 85/1.4.
The 100mm macro is also stunning, the 50 planar strong and the 24-85mm zoom amazingly good. I never used my 17-35mm a whole lot but they too are going for very high prices nowadays. The rarest of all is the 400mm, very few made, pulling over $4K.
Anyway, it's something different but, like I said, it's for only specialized uses. With the digital it is only 6mp so cropping can get tricky pretty quickly. I've actually been using my N1 quite a bit and enjoying it a great deal...it helped me kill of my remaining Kodachrome in December.
They have stayed quite expensive and you're right, the prime lenses are hard to come by. Specifically the 85/1.4.
The 100mm macro is also stunning, the 50 planar strong and the 24-85mm zoom amazingly good. I never used my 17-35mm a whole lot but they too are going for very high prices nowadays. The rarest of all is the 400mm, very few made, pulling over $4K.
Anyway, it's something different but, like I said, it's for only specialized uses. With the digital it is only 6mp so cropping can get tricky pretty quickly. I've actually been using my N1 quite a bit and enjoying it a great deal...it helped me kill of my remaining Kodachrome in December.
Kent, I am very curious about this camera still (limiting factor being the steep prices and low availability).
I find it a shame also, that many lenses have been slaughtered and converted to Canon mount, driving also prices up (especially the wide zoom and 85mm it seems).
One has to be quite committed or well heeled, to tip toe into the unfortunately discontinued Contax SLR territory.
2WK
Rangefinder User
From left to right:
OM1/2 with MD
Nikon F100 with grip
Nikon F100
Nikon F4
Looks like a Canon 5D or 1D but I'm not sure
M6
Canon P&S
Let's see how many I got right
Nice!
Om2s, nikon EM, nikon n80, f4, 5Dmk2, m6, canon ixus/elph aps pos.
Lilserenity
Well-known
My used and abused...
Both OM2ns, only recently acquired the black one for a paltry sum. Both now serviced so work as good as new, the chrome OM2n is actually in pretty good condition except for a dent on the underside where it got dropped on McDonalds' tiled floor once from a good couple of feet or more.
Both OM2ns, only recently acquired the black one for a paltry sum. Both now serviced so work as good as new, the chrome OM2n is actually in pretty good condition except for a dent on the underside where it got dropped on McDonalds' tiled floor once from a good couple of feet or more.
menos
Veteran
Kent, I will have my eyes open on the Contax N variants, despite I doubt, they get in any affordable terrain.
kdemas
Enjoy Life.
Menos,
There are N1s out there in nice condition for a little over $200 US. Even KEH has a few, seen here.
If you like zooms the 24-85mm is the lens I'd recommend starting with, very nice. For far less money you can get a Zeiss 28-80mm, though the build is lighter and it does not use a silent wave motor to focus, instead it's a direct screw. Quality from the pictures from it and it's lighter cousin, the 70-200mm, are quite good. I have an extra 28-80mm that you can get really cheap if you decide to get into the system.
Anyway, best of luck and enjoy whatever it is you're shooting. We're all lucky that there are/were so many choices out there.
Kent
There are N1s out there in nice condition for a little over $200 US. Even KEH has a few, seen here.
If you like zooms the 24-85mm is the lens I'd recommend starting with, very nice. For far less money you can get a Zeiss 28-80mm, though the build is lighter and it does not use a silent wave motor to focus, instead it's a direct screw. Quality from the pictures from it and it's lighter cousin, the 70-200mm, are quite good. I have an extra 28-80mm that you can get really cheap if you decide to get into the system.
Anyway, best of luck and enjoy whatever it is you're shooting. We're all lucky that there are/were so many choices out there.
Kent
Kent, I will have my eyes open on the Contax N variants, despite I doubt, they get in any affordable terrain.
menos
Veteran
Menos,
There are N1s out there in nice condition for a little over $200 US. Even KEH has a few, seen here.
If you like zooms the 24-85mm is the lens I'd recommend starting with, very nice. For far less money you can get a Zeiss 28-80mm, though the build is lighter and it does not use a silent wave motor to focus, instead it's a direct screw. Quality from the pictures from it and it's lighter cousin, the 70-200mm, are quite good. I have an extra 28-80mm that you can get really cheap if you decide to get into the system.
Anyway, best of luck and enjoy whatever it is you're shooting. We're all lucky that there are/were so many choices out there.
Kent
Thanks Kent for the tips - I handled the N1 and didn't like it much.
I am a nikon guy with SLRs, using a F5 (heavy tank) and F3/ FM3a for manual focus for film with SLRs.
I shoot mostly Leica M at the moment though and have slimmed down on SLRs.
The Contax N1 was compact and light by comparison, but felt quite alien.
The only reason, to try out the Contax for me is the 85mm (complementing by the 50 1.4 and the 17-35, if a system should be interesting).
The Ndigital is the only body, interesting to me for the wonderful images, I have seen with it, but I think, it is more a paradise bird of a camera, costing more and more money and leaving uncertainties (parts, service) for very high costs.
I remain a silent Contax fan, until a sweet deal arises ;-)
A pity, Contax didn't make it "back then".
jmooney
Guy with a camera
Menos,
There are N1s out there in nice condition for a little over $200 US. Even KEH has a few, seen here.
If you like zooms the 24-85mm is the lens I'd recommend starting with, very nice. For far less money you can get a Zeiss 28-80mm, though the build is lighter and it does not use a silent wave motor to focus, instead it's a direct screw. Quality from the pictures from it and it's lighter cousin, the 70-200mm, are quite good. I have an extra 28-80mm that you can get really cheap if you decide to get into the system.
Anyway, best of luck and enjoy whatever it is you're shooting. We're all lucky that there are/were so many choices out there.
Kent
The only affordable problem comes with the 24-85 these days. There is someone out there who'll convert them to work on Canon DSLRs (AF and everything!) so they've become more dear since then. RIghtly so though as they are incredible lenses.
Add the Contax N system to the same list as the Pentax 645AF - cameras I should have bought before there was a digital solution for them and they were giving them away.....
kdemas
Enjoy Life.
The only affordable problem comes with the 24-85 these days. There is someone out there who'll convert them to work on Canon DSLRs (AF and everything!) so they've become more dear since then. RIghtly so though as they are incredible lenses.
Add the Contax N system to the same list as the Pentax 645AF - cameras I should have bought before there was a digital solution for them and they were giving them away.....
Yeah, good point. The Coronus conversions have definitely had an impact. The 17-35mm in particular has been a big conversion favorite.
The 24-85mm can still be had for under $500 but you have to keep your eyes out for them.
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