> If one day...I cannot buy a new camera body that
> supports my investment, then I will feel betrayed.


Boz....
I hate to say this, but that day is pretty much here for me. Has been for a
while now. 

Here's my big dilemma. I like buying bodies new, simply because I like to
know there are no hidden problems, and I like to be able to replace a body
immediately and with no hassle in case of loss. Plus, I like to know I have
the latest in the basic technology--screens and light meters and such.
Finally, I like to be able to find accessories.

But the kind of camera I prefer is on life support.

I've said it before--I like metal, manual, mechanical cameras. "Classic"-era
SLRs. But the only company that's released one in recent years is Nikon.

Much as I love my ES II, it's an antique. If it broke, or I dropped it, or
it was stolen, it would take a lot of work to find a replacement. It has
some peculiarities; it's outdated in some ways. It's o-l-d. I feel it every
time I take it out of the house: it's not just a tool, it's a treasure.

I keep coming back to the same conclusion: that I should just get an FM3a.
If Pentax still made _one_ old-style metal-manual-mechanical SLR...one
classic Pentax...but it doesn't.

It's not like the FM3a is any great paragon. It's no modern F2 or Spotmatic
or anything. It's kind of a cheap-ass, crappy example of the genre,
actually. 

But it's the genre I prefer. And it's what's out there.

Tough problem.

So tell me what you'd do. Comments, jokes, opinions, sympathy, ridicule,
from anybody, all welcome.

--Mike 

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