oftheherd
Veteran
Well, since the cognocenti have scarfed up all the good Fujinon glass, I can see why you are stuck on the secondary OM and Nikon glass as your choice. 😀 😀
I've never used either Nikon or OM. I remember many years ago (80s I think), an editor at Modern Photography relating that one of their better known lab testers thought the only difference between Nikon and OM lenses was a slight difference in the way one handled certain wave lengths of light. If he didn't know which lens he was being given to test slides from, that was how he could tell. It wasn't stated, but the implication was that the OM was the better by a little bit. That at a time when Nikon was pretty much the standard that all others were compared to.
Nikon has a well earned reputation for most of its cameras and glass, at least into the 80s. However, OM was nipping at their heels all the way. Posts here in the forums seem to indicate contemporary OMs may have an edge in glass.
One advantage OM definitely has is size. They are much easier to carry, therefore, to use. Small size combined with quality, as pioneered by Fujica and OM, was such a good idea, that everyone copied it. Personally, I don't think any camera maker was as successful in that as Pentax. I don't know that the bayonet mount Pentax lenses were as good as the screw mount lenses. They were great and still sought after.
If I were to get into another into another system, I would probably opt for the OM system. But that is no doubt influenced by my love of Fujicas, their smalll size, quality lenses, and ease of use. That would only be if I couldn't use my Fujicas or Yashicas. The latter takes the only Contax glass I have. Now there is another lens line to consider.
I've never used either Nikon or OM. I remember many years ago (80s I think), an editor at Modern Photography relating that one of their better known lab testers thought the only difference between Nikon and OM lenses was a slight difference in the way one handled certain wave lengths of light. If he didn't know which lens he was being given to test slides from, that was how he could tell. It wasn't stated, but the implication was that the OM was the better by a little bit. That at a time when Nikon was pretty much the standard that all others were compared to.
Nikon has a well earned reputation for most of its cameras and glass, at least into the 80s. However, OM was nipping at their heels all the way. Posts here in the forums seem to indicate contemporary OMs may have an edge in glass.
One advantage OM definitely has is size. They are much easier to carry, therefore, to use. Small size combined with quality, as pioneered by Fujica and OM, was such a good idea, that everyone copied it. Personally, I don't think any camera maker was as successful in that as Pentax. I don't know that the bayonet mount Pentax lenses were as good as the screw mount lenses. They were great and still sought after.
If I were to get into another into another system, I would probably opt for the OM system. But that is no doubt influenced by my love of Fujicas, their smalll size, quality lenses, and ease of use. That would only be if I couldn't use my Fujicas or Yashicas. The latter takes the only Contax glass I have. Now there is another lens line to consider.