Gary E
Well-known
The Nikon EM has a 1/90 backup as well as the Nikon F3 but is at 1/60. The Contax RTS II has a 1/55~1/60 backup too.
i have to disagree. e.g the canon at-1 is full manual, but because of its electromagnet-controlled shutter only works with a battery. it has even not any manual emergency speed.
The Yashica FR series of camera are battery dependent, even in manual mode, if I recall correctly. So probably the Contax RTS also?But that places it in a very exotic class of electronic cameras that disabled the (essentially free) automatic mode they inherently were capable of to fill a (felt) gap in the makers catalogue. I remember two more (one tiny, the other a big lump - Fujica and Praktica, perhaps?), but that may have been all there ever were - automatic SLRs without manual mode soon had replaced the mechanic, manual ones as the regular entry level model.
The Yashica FR series of camera are battery dependent, even in manual mode, if I recall correctly. So probably the Contax RTS also?
Wayne,
There is absolutely nothing wrong and no problem with your suggestion. That said, meters themselves can die, and have done that to me. Or there is always the unexpected. It is nice to have the cushion to fall back on instead of the concrete.
One of my favorite slr's the Yashica TL Super, the camera that started me down the photography road. I have not found one in years with a working meter.
Canon EF @ 1/60 sec. if not mentioned previously.
Now. I have to ask. Batteries for cameras of this nature are small. light, cheap, last almost forever. What is the problem with checking the battery condition frequently carrying 1-2 spares for emergencies? I always load a fresh battery for special occasions/trips. That has been my practice since forever (shortly after electricity was invented) and I have never ever had to replace a battery in the field.
Worry over cameras and batteries is DUMB!
That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Wayne