If they are broken, do you want to repair them?
This is the forum for that.
If they are broken, do you want to repair them?
This is the forum for that.
Usable? Assuming that they're not broken, sure!
For more info, you can download manuals from www.butkus.org
Hi guys,
I just found some old camera equipment. I‘m looking for some opinions and thoughts. Can I still use those today or are they unusable?
Cameras:
Canon EOS 500n
Minolta X-300
Konica Autoreflex T
Olympus XA + Flash A11
Nizo 801 Macro
Konica Autoreflex T3
Lenses:
MD ZOOM 35-70mm 1:3.5 Macro
Konica Hexanon AR 28mm F 3.5
RMC Tokina 500mm 1:8
RMC Tokina 75-260mm 1:4.5
Konica Hexanon zoom lens 1:4.5 70-230mm
Konica Hexanon AR 28mm f 3.5
Vivitar Series 1 70-210mm f3.5
Konica UC fish-eye Hexanon Ar 15mm F2.8
Canon zoom lens EF 28-80mm 3.5-5.6
Others things:
Teleconverter? Konica 12mm, 20mm, 36mm
KFT auto teleplus 2x
I only see good things here.
All of them are great to use.
- The Olympus XA with flash is now a collector's item,
- the Minolta MD 35-70/3.5 is a classic for excellent image quality,
- the RMC Tokina 500/8 is a mirror telephoto lens I've read only good things about (a filter must always be mounted on the back), and
- the Minolta X-300 is a solid companion.
They are usable, all are well known with good matching lens. Other than the Konica lens that match the Konica T, and the Canon Zoom that will go with the Canon body, the MD zoom for the Minolta X 300 the Tonika and Vivitar might fit either the Minolta or Konica. Need batteries so you can test the meters on the Konica, the Minolta and Canon will need a battery to the the shutters. You can likely find on line manuals for all the bodies.
Sell the XA on its own. If you can find someone to test it to make sure it works, you can get a very good price for it.
The rest of it varies from junk paperweight to nice paperweight, in terms of value. Sell it in a box.
Thank you very much. I definitely like the XA because it is very small and light, but I for sure want to challenge myself a bit with manual focus. I‘m probably gonna check which camera the tokina 500 fits on an try to familiarize myself with the zoom.While the XA sells for a surprisingly large price on the used markets, I would describe it as being a desirable item for those who want to use it, rather than a collectors item.
It is obviously very compact, so if that matters to you, it might be a great place to start. It also uses easy to find batteries, which is also a plus.
If you want the extra capabilities of interchangeable lenses, the Minolta X-300 is fairly simple and reasonably compact. It also takes easy to find batteries.
The Konica Autoreflex T is a very good camera, but fairly large and heavy, and you have to take steps to deal with the battery issue, because they were designed for no longer available mercury batteries. That is relatively easy to deal with, but not quite as convenient.
The Canon gives you auto-focus, but you probably have just one lens in amongst those lenses that is compatible with it. Arguably though that may be the easiest camera for a relative beginner to use.
I only see good things here.
All of them are great to use.
- The Olympus XA with flash is now a collector's item,
- the Minolta MD 35-70/3.5 is a classic for excellent image quality,
- the RMC Tokina 500/8 is a mirror telephoto lens I've read only good things about (a filter must always be mounted on the back), and
- the Minolta X-300 is a solid companion.
Since you have a lot of Konica equipment, I'd start with the AutoReflex T3
Konica UC fish-eye Hexanon Ar 15mm F2.8
Wow, impressive.
Is the autoreflex T or the autoreflex t3 the better option?While the XA sells for a surprisingly large price on the used markets, I would describe it as being a desirable item for those who want to use it, rather than a collectors item.
It is obviously very compact, so if that matters to you, it might be a great place to start. It also uses easy to find batteries, which is also a plus.
If you want the extra capabilities of interchangeable lenses, the Minolta X-300 is fairly simple and reasonably compact. It also takes easy to find batteries.
The Konica Autoreflex T is a very good camera, but fairly large and heavy, and you have to take steps to deal with the battery issue, because they were designed for no longer available mercury batteries. That is relatively easy to deal with, but not quite as convenient.
The Canon gives you auto-focus, but you probably have just one lens in amongst those lenses that is compatible with it. Arguably though that may be the easiest camera for a relative beginner to use.
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