Archive for March, 2006
Reader Canon Ixy
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Nikkormat Cameras
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Question: Why does the NIKKORMAT FT Camera require a Battery, is it for the meter, can it run without one (mechanical)??
Since it works on the principal of a mechanical mechanism, is it possible that it doesn’t require a battery. Is the battery just for the working of the Meter Prong???
So, if its only use is for the meter, and I don’t use a battery in the future, will the pictures still look “picturesque”Answer: The Nikkormatt FT can definitely be used without a battery. Most cameras of that era and before were strictly mechanical, and most didn’t have light metering. In order to take a good picture, you need to know about exposure and how shutter speed, aperture, and film speed interact to create the proper exposure value, or you will get either an underexposed or overexposed photograph. 35mm SLRs were relatively new in the 50s and 60s, and the small electronics needed to operate such a metering system were just beginning to make their way into consumer-oriented cameras. My 1961 Petri Flex V looks very similar to the Nikkormat, and doesn’t have any meter at all. You either need to use a hand-held light meter or calculate your own exposure values. Your camera was built between 1965 and 1967, just as camera manufacturers were starting to integrate meters into the cameras, and has what is called “match-needle” exposure setting. That means that you can set the shutter speed and aperture by matching the needles in the viewfinder. The needles are part of the light metering system, and when they are matched, you have a correct exposure. This is the system that the battery operates. Without the battery, the light meter system is dead, but the rest of the camera works fine. Later cameras became more automated, and the light meter was linked to the shutter and aperture settings, so you didn’t need to manually adjust them. Nowadays, if your camera has a dead battery, you can’t take a picture at all. Doesn’t seem like progress to me.
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Question: What camera should I buy?I will proabably a Nikon, because I had a Nikon two others. One is a Nikon The other is compact coolpix http://www.beachaudio.com/Imation/26132-p-99277.html?utm_source=GAN&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=26132&utm_content=atr old. Its a Nikon (Nikkormat) FT (his film) http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d1/Nikon_Nikomat_FT_01.JPG'm thinking I want another digital, but not compact. As a SLR camera. Perhaps as a Nikon D60? This will be my first time with this type of digital camera, so I want it to be simple and easy (since I can not take a digital photography class at my school and I need to teach me how to do) Thank you!
Answer: Nikon D60 May be ideal to meet the requirements.
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