Repair Manual Yashica Electro 35 Gx

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Repair Manual Yashica Electro 35 Gx

I enjoyed your piece about the Yashica Electro 35 GSN. Tomioka Optical who supplied Yashica with all but one lens was the ‘Johnny come lately’ with their first Tessar clone. Agfa for example introduced their Solinar, a Tessar clone, in 1933. That was the first year the Zeiss patent of 1902 ended.

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Film

As BeBu says. Getting a working light meter on a camera made more than a couple of decades ago is what we call a 'crapshoot' - an American expression for 'a gamble'. Lightmeters are the most fragile part of any camera, as a rule. If you are going to shoot color negative film (and soon you may have no choice) the latitude of exposure is such that 'sunny-16' (Google) is plenty good for exposure with no meter at all. There are certainly hundreds of cameras of the sort you seek and most of them are pretty good, surprisingly good, in fact. If you don't worry about the meter working or not having a meter, they are mostly inexpensive, even by the most conservative standard.

Ricoh, other Yashicas, and many, many more. What BeBu said. I used to have a few of the Yashicas, and never knowing what shutter speed the camera had decided to pick used to drive me nuts.

The Olympus 35RC would be a good camera. Nice and small.

The Konica C35's and it's variants I like also, but their build quality isn't as good as the Oly. Then there's the Konica Auto S2.

Bigger, heavier, but a great lens. The metering is very good (not sure what it is, probably CDS, but it's good even in low light), and it has AE lock like the Konica. Fun camera that makes sharp photos and costs peanuts.

Works in manual and auto modes too. And the reason I'm against Cds cells is just because they can't even measure the light properly in indoor conditions.​I disagree; however, the silicon cell does react more quickly to changing light levels. Perhaps this was what you wanted? As pointed out by others here, any of these models is several decades old now, so whatever you get, it would be wise to have it serviced before use. I don't know your country, but I have used Mark Hama in Atlanta for service. He has repaired Yashica cameras for me, as well as other models.

Despite the maligned CDS metering (which I don't have any issues with, at all), probably the closest equivalent of the Electro is the very fine Minolta Hi-Matic 7S. It's much the same size and weight of the Electro, possibly a little heavy for some people, but seems better-built. Runs on a simple 1.5v EPX25 cell, and gives you a choice of automatic or manual with the battery, or manual without. The selected exposure in auto mode is indicated in the viewfinder, in the Exposure Value scale the shutter program utilises. A truly excellent 45mm Rokkor PF f/1.8 lens turns in as good a job as the Electro's esteemed Yashinon f/1.7. (In my humble opinion, of course.) As a guy who prefers big, solid cameras, the Hi-Matic & is high on my list of favourite rangefinders. In such a low light I wouldn't trust in-camera lightmeter.

But there is something way more important: Control over shutter speed. Photographing any moving objects in low light require 1/30s shutter speed and fast lens.

Yashica GX got great lens ( the same class as excellent Minolta Hi-Matic E ) but even with f1.7 lens, it's a lottery. For low light I would strongly recommend shutter priority rangefinder with f1.7 lens. Yashica Electro 35 (G, Professional, GT, GS, GTN, GSN) are all aperture priority.but when You switch camera for flash you got nice 1/30s shutter. This option makes Yashica Electro cameras one of the greatest tools for low light photography. The GX is a great camera, and I like the aperture priority system.