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gwhitegeog

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  1. Hi Larry, Yes, the Canon system was better in many ways: all Canon FD lenses made from 1971 work with all bodies right up to the end of the FD era, including shutter priority and program. Nikon was more of a faff, so they changed the system in ‘77. But for example the DP-3 head on the F2 or DP-12 has much better metering cells. I use the DP-3 on one of my F2 bodies which does not work with AI only lenses but works with the non-AI or AI lenses with rabbit ear connectors… All Canon metering cells of that era (if I recall) were silicon. G
  2. Hi Larry, The T-90 was a great camera but the shutter was its weak point - not engineered for the number of exposures that was typical or for a 35 year life! Many for sale now do have dead shutters. Some shutters can be resurrected with TLC but eventually they fail beyond repair and there are no spares (apart from other 'failed' shutter units!). I live in Portugal and can get to Lisbon in 2 hours, where there is an excellent classic camera shop that specialises in film cameras. It's a Nikon specialist but they know a guy who can do Canons. He is about to look at three T-90 bodies for me: 1 works perfectly but has a cracked viewfinder glass, 2 is completely dead, 3 turns on but doesn't fire and has a failing LCD (another issue now after 35 years+). My Nikons of the 70s and 80s have fared better (in terms of shutters) though my old F1 and EF are still going strong. The T-90 was big and clunky but it had great technological innovations to set the pattern for EOS, etc. Best Gary
  3. Hi Larry, I have 5 x T-90s - 2 working and three others I am about to give to a technician to try to make one working body from the three! So I have a bit of experience. I have heard of this before, though not seen it on any of my cameras. I sounds to me like a mechanical problem with the EE sensor pin. A dismantle, clean and lubrication by a good technician may work, or have a dead donor body available for spares (about £25-40 on eBay) so s/he can cannibalise for parts. Where do you live? Do you have a good technician you can use? Gary
  4. Mine is P821 code and with split image / microprism focussing screen.
  5. Yes, it was a long series of posts, I wasn’t sure. Technically it was made ‘74 to ‘78. But did we want to know the production run?
  6. My EF is working beautifully still and I just put through it a roll of Fuji Velvia 50. Mine is 1976. The rear light seals need replacing, so that is the next job.
  7. Yes, I think it is actually just a case of recalibrating the meter.
  8. PS Went to the official Fuji stockist in Spain, who had 17 rolls of 135 Velvia 100 and some packs of 4x5". I bought some rolls of Velvia 135. €28 a throw but there you go..... Another reputable analogue lab I use in Spain, said that now only Kodak is a reliable producer of colour film. Fuji is very inconsistent and no notion of stock production let alone customer service. I think the problem is that these companies are ultimately run by 'accountants in with green pens' and there are probably few executives / directors in post (if any) who can remember the pre-digital era.
  9. Just thought I'd trawl some ideas from colleagues... E6 35mm has become very difficult to get. I have used mainly C41 in the last few years to preserve the stock of Fujichrome I have in the fridge but could do with buying some more. Any thoughts about current availability? I know Fuji stopped making E6 'temporarily' during the pandemic and stopped selling Velvia in the US in 2021 due to new environmental regulations about a certain chemical compound present and stopped making 4x5" etc. My usual online stores in Europe seem to have nil stock of Fujichrome (of any type) and the last roll I managed to buy was Velvia 100 about a year ago. Kodak Ektachrome 100 seems to be available if you look and don't mind paying €28 per roll. It seems like the days of E6 might be numbered but does anyone know the current situation re: production by Fuji? Thanks in advance Gary
  10. Thanks, the technical article from the Dutch guy (Buktus link) was a good read. In summary, with zinc-airs now $1 a throw (or less) I have the following regime: PX625A's that are 1.5v and alkaline, I use in my Nikon F (which is converted to run on 1.5v cells). Though alkalines do have a voltage drop as they age, the ones I have in the meter head are 6 months old (and still giving a stable 1.5v when discharge tested with my multimeter), so I'll just monitor them and when they die, replace them with 1.5v silver oxide LR44s with PX625 adaptors. My Canon EF can take any cell that will fit (1.5v or 1.35v). My Canon F1, I use the Wein 1.35v zinc-airs or other zinc-airs with adaptors. Attempting to buy 'old new' mercury cells (still apparently made in some parts of the world) is nonsense and pointless: leaving aside the mercury issue, could I trust their provenance or longevity in my precious old cameras, even if I could source them? Zinc-airs are the way to go, if they last less than a year, I can live with the cost!
  11. Yes, I agree about the zinc-airs but I only need them now in my F1 now as my Nikon F and Canon EF can use 1.5 v cells with adaptors (see above). Thus I buy lots of zinc-airs and change as necessary, they are a lot cheaper now (the LR44 sized ones) than they used to be....
  12. I checked this out. The Kanto device is available on Amazon.com (US) for about $30 but is not available on Amazon.co.uk or Amazon in the EU (where I live). I can see how it was useful in the past, but now seems like a 'solution to a problem that does not exist' - surely far simpler to use one of the PX625 metal adaptors and fit a 1.35v zinc-air LR44 sized cell inside? Best Gary
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