Review 5 of 26
Price Paid:
$100.00
from Ebay Summary: I bought this dude as a backup for my AE-1 and FD lenses, but the T-70 is so much fun that now my AE-1 is a backup.
Let's get a couple things straight here: This camera is as high a quality camera as you can slap a lens onto, but it might not be a professional's first pick because it's missing stuff like a depth of field preview and it might not advance the film fast enough for a sports photographer.
But this camera's cool in every way that counts for me. The metering system is quite a bit more sophisticated than the AE-1's, with a partial meter that's pretty swank. It runs on AA batteries!! (I'll take this feature over a depth of field preview anyday) This camera's pretty light too, but it's still plenty durable.
The manual mode seems powerful enough to me. The guy below says his camera tries to change the shutter speed on him when he's trying to do fully manual stuff, but that only happens if you have your lens on the "A" setting. Otherwise, you pick the f-stop by moving the aperature ring on the lens and the camera doesn't have a say about the shutter speed anymore. If it doesn't think you have enough light or something, it'll protest in the viewfinder that you're using the wrong aperature, but it won't actually change anything.
Basically, the manual mode on the camera works like this: you pick the aperature, and then you pick the shutter speed, and then you press the button. How else is manual supposed to work?
Bottom line, I think this camera's a great body for Canon's excellent FD lens line. I think it's a better camera then the AE-1, anyways, and the AE-1 is already considered by most to be a pretty sweet camera. A pro will want a T-90. Strengths: It takes Canon FD lenses
Light
Powerful metering
Nice control layout
Runs on AA batteries!!
Simply looks sexier than the AE-1 Weaknesses: No depth of field preview (There are markings on the lens that will help you work out this problem.)
It's noisy
Cable release mechanism is kinda weird and it was hard for me to find a cable for it. (I usually use my FTb if I know I'll need to do a time exposure)
I don't think it's possible to do a double exposure Similar Products Used: Canon FTb
Canon AE-1
Canon A-1
Nikon FM
Pentax MX Customer Service: Doubt if Canon would be helpful. These are cheap enough that I'll just buy another if I bust it.
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