Andreas Thaler
Subscriber
The Minolta (Maxxum) Dynax 7000i (Minolta Alpha 7700i) was the successor to the Minolta (Maxxum, Alpha) 7000 AF and was released in 1988.
The 7000 AF was the first SLR with integrated autofocus, which was a huge market success and ushered in the era of automatic focusing in SLR cameras.
The 7000i offers faster "intelligent" autofocus, multi-segment metering, and introduced the Minolta chip card system, which programmed the camera to expose specific subjects. For example, "Travel" with depth-of-field priority or "Portrait" with appropriate aperture priority for background resolution.
It's a heavy, solid and well made camera that can be acquired very inexpensively on the used market.
I just have managed to get three defective 7000i practically for free

I plan to open and examine one of them, following the instructions in the SPT Journal January/February 1991:

A Minolta Service Manual seems not to be available.
I'm particularly interested in the extent to which the 7000i can still be DIY repaired and how the internals differ from the Minolta 7000.
I suspect that with the 7000i I am going to reach the limit of repairability, which I originally set with the Minolta 9000 AF. But I'm open to surprises.
I still also assume that it's not the integrated circuits that are failing, but the peripherals, i.e., contacts, connections and mechanical parts.
Here, too, we are breaking new ground, at least as far as repair reports on the web go. I haven't found anything on this except @ogtronix teardown at

Minolta (Maxxum/Alpha) 7000 AF: Aperture issues resolved/shortcut; LCDs, aperture ring, shutter unit replaced; aperture solenoid cleaned
There is always too little space on the table for such work 😌


Minolta (Maxxum, Alpha) 9000 AF: Removal of the mirrorbox/assembly, investigating the aperture issue, replacing the sticky damper in the shutter unit
One question though, these were also known for having leaking LCD windows. Can they not make these leak proof? This problem also affects The Nikon F4 as well and I had to stop using one because the LCD went blank after a few years in my use. With the F4 you can replace the LCDs quite easily...

I'm curious to see how the expedition goes


Minolta 7000i - Wikipedia
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