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Old 05-26-2010, 05:49 PM   #1
Water Warrior 2
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Click

Another make work project. Spent a lot of time a few years ago trying to find a battery for my 1976 Pentax camera, no luck. Guess I was talking to the wrong sales people cause I'm am smiling now. Just for fun I Goggled the battery # and found a bunch of workable replacements. Went hunting this morning and actually found one in town.
So now I can get back to taking pics on film with a very simple but wonderful camera. Thanks to modern technology the film can be put on a disc and fed to the computer.


Note to self: take the friggin camera on your rides.



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Old 05-26-2010, 08:44 PM   #2
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Re: Click

What is film?
I'm trying to remember what that was. Is that what went into all those 35mm SLR cameras I have with all the telephoto and wide angles lenses and filters and rifle stock grips to hold it steady? And do they make Polaroid film anymore? I think I still have a couple of those.
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Old 05-26-2010, 09:06 PM   #3
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Re: Click

I miss those old mechanical cameras...
If I could embed image sensor at the back of those camera, I would go back.
Specially, on the midume or large format cameras.
I once saw the advertisement of Midume Format DSLR >> prices are really high; expensiver than a good reliable cage price.. ha ha ha
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Old 05-26-2010, 09:46 PM   #4
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Re: Click

Mrlmd1, I think Polaroid stopped making the instant film within the last year, but you might still be able to find someone selling it on the internet from old stock inventory. Those were great when I used to do insurance repair jobs because you could snap a picture and staple it to the paperwork right on the job site to show what damage you found and how you fixed it, no computers or printers or ink cartridges necessary.
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Old 05-27-2010, 12:32 AM   #5
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Re: Click

Right on BB. Years ago a friend of mine used a polaroid whenever he was tearing something apart in the garage. He always got things back together properly and no missing/extra parts at job's end.



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Old 05-27-2010, 06:09 AM   #6
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Re: Click

Quote:
Originally Posted by mrlmd1
What is film?
Is that what went into all those 35mm SLR cameras I have with all the telephoto and wide angles lenses and filters and rifle stock grips to hold it steady?
And I could add (about my Olympus 35mm gear) "That cost me the equivalent of hundreds of $$$$$ when I bought it, 30 years ago, still in excellent condition, but worth nickels & dimes if I wanted to sell it now"

The one thing I miss, about my cheapo digital camera, is the Olympus flashgun that could light up an aircraft hangar!
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Old 05-27-2010, 09:30 AM   #7
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Re: Click

Anyone remember flashbulbs?
And anyone still use a lightmeter?
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Old 05-27-2010, 11:19 AM   #8
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Re: Click

My mom and dad had a camera with a big reflector built on top. You had to screw in a light bulb then it only made one flash and you needed a new bulb. As technology improved, we got a little cube that had four sides, it fit on other cameras that were more "modern", the cube turned 90 degrees after each flash, so you got four flashes before you had to put a new cube on top. Yeah, I remember.
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Old 05-27-2010, 11:58 AM   #9
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Re: Click

Quote:
Originally Posted by burkbuilds
My mom and dad had a camera with a big reflector built on top. You had to screw in a light bulb then it only made one flash and you needed a new bulb. As technology improved, we got a little cube that had four sides, it fit on other cameras that were more "modern", the cube turned 90 degrees after each flash, so you got four flashes before you had to put a new cube on top. Yeah, I remember.
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Old 05-27-2010, 01:30 PM   #10
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Re: Click

Quote:
Originally Posted by burkbuilds
As technology improved, we got a little cube that had four sides, it fit on other cameras that were more "modern", the cube turned 90 degrees after each flash, so you got four flashes before you had to put a new cube on top.
On the polaroid camera, I remember the "flash bar". This had 5 flashbulbs in a row, that were used automatically, one after the other, as you took pictures. When these 5 were used up, you turned the flash bar round, & there were 5 more on the other side.
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