Gabriel M.A.
My Red Dot Glows For You
Lens adaptability was one of the two reservations with it. It takes most of the LTM lenses but not the ones with bulging rears. So my 15mm Heliar was out. And the other was the lack of a provision for electronic viewfinders, making the 3" rear LCD the only easy choice.
However, it did take other lenses easily. The M42 SLR lenses mated easily, making all that one ever wanted with Takumars, Jupiters, and Helioses an easy reality on digital.
I was not aware that it would take M42 lenses easily; must be quite a task to use it that way, though. My Lumix GF1 with the 90mm Summicron-M is already quite unbalanced, I can't imagine using a M42 Jupiter-9 on the Samsung NX.
Non-DSLR, of course.
Very nice shots, btw.
Matus
Well-known
Answer to the original question: I actually do not know whether NX line is a failure as I have never seen sale numbers, but indeed one sees NEX or m4/3 much more often.
So - if the NX is a failure, than it is MARKETING failure. Nothing more or less. The camera - based on what I have read - is quite good. The fact that it does not support M lenses is irrelevant for 99.9% of potential buyers. So I simply think that Samsung underestimated the competitiveness of the mirrorless market and the fact that they do not really have a name like a high-end camera producer.
So - if the NX is a failure, than it is MARKETING failure. Nothing more or less. The camera - based on what I have read - is quite good. The fact that it does not support M lenses is irrelevant for 99.9% of potential buyers. So I simply think that Samsung underestimated the competitiveness of the mirrorless market and the fact that they do not really have a name like a high-end camera producer.
Roger Hicks
Veteran
Well, that or luck. Or of course a combination of the two. Sometimes things just happen.Answer to the original question: I actually do not know whether NX line is a failure as I have never seen sale numbers, but indeed one sees NEX or m4/3 much more often.
So - if the NX is a failure, than it is MARKETING failure. Nothing more or less. The camera - based on what I have read - is quite good. The fact that it does not support M lenses is irrelevant for 99.9% of potential buyers. So I simply think that Samsung underestimated the competitiveness of the mirrorless market and the fact that they do not really have a name like a high-end camera producer.
Cheers,
R.
dct
perpetual amateur
+1[...]So - if the NX is a failure, than it is MARKETING failure. Nothing more or less. The camera - based on what I have read - is quite good. The fact that it does not support M lenses is irrelevant for 99.9% of potential buyers.[...]
Agreed from the bare numbers. The M lenses users and potential buyers is a small market. But it is a marketing failure - as you mention - to not build a new body capable of taking M lenses. Though the target market of this camera line is not the typical M lens user, the early announcement of Sony (or Fuji) that their new bodies (NEX, X) will adopt to the main stream of small legacy glass was an additional marketing push.
ZorkiKat
ЗоркийК&
I was not aware that it would take M42 lenses easily; must be quite a task to use it that way, though. My Lumix GF1 with the 90mm Summicron-M is already quite unbalanced, I can't imagine using a M42 Jupiter-9 on the Samsung NX.
Non-DSLR, of course.
Very nice shots, btw.
Thanks Gabriel.
M42 lenses on the Samsung NX200 required no more effort than having these lenses on DSLRs. In fact in many instances, quite easier. The Jupiter-9 (M42) is hardly larger than the Takumar 1.4/50. Having that lens on the NX won't be a struggle.
I've tried the LTM 30 J-9 too, and it also handled quite comfortably on the Samsung.
It was just a matter of gripping both lens and camera in the most natural manner, requiring none of the acrobatic finger movements required by some of the bigger DSLRs.
The most difficult lens, where I actually felt the lack or want of balance, was when I put an M42 400mm lens (the Astranar 'Girl-Watcher' lens from the 1970s) on the NX. The 35cm long lens was too much for the thin bodied CSC Samsung, but nonetheless worked for this moon shot from November 28 last year:

Robin P
Well-known
Happy long term user
Happy long term user
Now 11 months since this thread started and I just wanted to note that I am still happy with my Samsung system.
Not tempted yet by the new NX30 although I might sell the NX10 and go back to an NX100 body when they get really cheap - something about that funny looking little camera that endeared it to me.
When I feel the need for something unpredictably different I pop on a PK adapter and an old Cosinon 50mm, ideal for portraits and flowers. I must say that using old lenses with an adapter on the Samsungs is much easier and more successful than any other system I've tried.
Happy long term user
Now 11 months since this thread started and I just wanted to note that I am still happy with my Samsung system.
Not tempted yet by the new NX30 although I might sell the NX10 and go back to an NX100 body when they get really cheap - something about that funny looking little camera that endeared it to me.
When I feel the need for something unpredictably different I pop on a PK adapter and an old Cosinon 50mm, ideal for portraits and flowers. I must say that using old lenses with an adapter on the Samsungs is much easier and more successful than any other system I've tried.
Robin P
Well-known
Still not tempted to look elsewhere
Still not tempted to look elsewhere
Having Samsung NX lenses that cover a range from 16mm to 200mm (24mm to 300mm equiv.) and now no other system I'm staying with Samsung even if the public doesn't take them seriously as camera makers.
Here's an out of camera jpg from the NX200 and 30mm pancake.
Still not tempted to look elsewhere
Having Samsung NX lenses that cover a range from 16mm to 200mm (24mm to 300mm equiv.) and now no other system I'm staying with Samsung even if the public doesn't take them seriously as camera makers.
Here's an out of camera jpg from the NX200 and 30mm pancake.

Thardy
Veteran
Having Samsung NX lenses that cover a range from 16mm to 200mm (24mm to 300mm equiv.) and now no other system I'm staying with Samsung even if the public doesn't take them seriously as camera makers.
Here's an out of camera jpg from the NX200 and 30mm pancake.
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Still seems to be working well.
Frank Petronio
Well-known
If Samsung hired a few internet blowhards to "review" their cameras and paid Amazon to market them then they'd have a winner without any product changes. That's the way it is with digital cameras, they all have huge, unmentioned shortcomings that go unnoticed until you actually get one in hand and find the menu system has no logic or the batteries only last a couple of hours, etc. Somehow DPKenHoffLuminous overlooked that....
For instance, the idiocy of putting a touch screen directly underneath a viewfinder only confirms that the manufacturers - from Japan, China, Korea, or the Moon - don't have a clue.
For instance, the idiocy of putting a touch screen directly underneath a viewfinder only confirms that the manufacturers - from Japan, China, Korea, or the Moon - don't have a clue.
kaiwasoyokaze
Half Frame Goodness
on tv (in Busan), almost every commercial break had a NX comparison with SONY. it was using outdated marketing terms such as more megapixels. so the marketing is here in their home turf.
however most of what i see on busan streets are canon and nikon black dslrs.
however most of what i see on busan streets are canon and nikon black dslrs.
Pioneer
Veteran
Well, it all depends on perspective I guess. They are kicking Apple's behind in the mobile reciever (cell phone) market. And since a bunch of those cameras come with built-in cameras you could say they are also kicking Nikon and Canon's behind as well. 
kaiwasoyokaze
Half Frame Goodness
that is true, most of my students all have samsung or LG as their smartphone.
might be the company i keep, but usually younger people here (women mostly) know more bout and have good impressions of Lumix because of the association with Leica.
might be the company i keep, but usually younger people here (women mostly) know more bout and have good impressions of Lumix because of the association with Leica.
Fuji, Sony, and Olympus seem to make the more desirable cameras in this category.
aizan
Veteran
nothing samsung has made has ever perked my interest, but i was just reading about the nx mini and thought that if they made a higher-end version with a built-in, rangefinder-style evf, i would actually buy that with the 17/1.8.
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