Kevin Farnell
Honorary Member Of Forums4airports
The Zenit-E/Prinzflex was the best SLR to learn with, as everything (and I mean everything) was manual. Even after you had set the aperture with the ring on the lens, you had to turn another ring to close the aperture to that setting (most other manual cameras had a mechanical link that did this on pressing the shutter release).I cut my photography teeth on a Zenit e or the Dixon's Prinzflex version, one had to think before depressing the exposure button, use of separate light meter. My first job got me into using Nikon and swear by that brand to this day. I always considered the Air France Concorde a beauty but missed the visit into BHX.
Thank you Kevin sir!
I can remember excitedly getting my new Zenit-E home (I still have it), unboxing it and then being baffled on reading through the instructions (I was about 15). There seemed so many settings - ASA (now ISO), shutter speed and aperture. The latter two dependant on the light meter and ASA setting. Once the penny dropped it was a great camera, if somewhat slow to operate and incredibly heavy.
My next camera was a Fuji STX-1 (again I still have it) for which I bought two Tamron lenses. It was awesome, with an excellent light metering system. It served me well on my holiday to Arizona, including a descent and ascent of the Grand Canyon.
Like Jenny, I moved on to Nikon. My first was an F50. This was not ideal for someone interested in fast action photography. Instead of thumb and finger wheels to set aperture and shutter speed, it had four buttons on top in front of the LCD display. You had to press the correct button to increase or decrease either aperture or shutter speed. Fine if you want to take scenery or portraits. Useless for action photography. I can't remember what happened to it. It's probably at the back of a cupboard somewhere.
I then moved on to a Nikon F80, which addressed all of the problems of the F50 along with adding a host of other features. It's actually on the table in front of me as i type.
My first DSLR was a Nikon D100. A good camera in it's day, but low on resolution at 6MP. I sold it to a colleague along with a Sigma zoom lens. I wish I'd kept the lens as it had screw on lens (similar to a filter) for macro photography.
My current camera is a Nikon D200. it's a little low on resolution at 10MP but gives quite acceptable results. For this, I have a Nikon 18-70mm zoom and my beloved Nikon 70-200mm F2.8 zoom along with Nikon 1.4X and 2.0X teleconverters. I'd like to get a new camera body, but fiances don't allow at the moment. If I do, the D200 wont be retired. For air shows, it will be fitted with the 18-70mm Zoom, whilst the new body would have the 70-200mm F2.8 lens attached.
But, whatever your choice of camera, get out there, take photos and share them here on F4A.
Regards
Kevin