Thing is you cannot compare the two.  Nikon and Canon have had their
flagship film cameras out for a while, and arguably anyone in the market
for one probably has one (or several) already.  Many Pentax users have
been waiting for our equivalent for a long time with no product to
satisfy the demand.  Therefore this demand is still untapped.  I don't
know how big the market for this is, but it bears no relation to the
market for the F5/EOS1V.

The other point is that much of the market for F5/1V, probably working
pros in the main, may well not buy their cameras through normal camera
stores but get them direct from the manufacturers or their distributors.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Iren & Henry Chu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: 31 January 2003 04:03
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: PMA and Pentax DSLR
> 
> 
> Dear all,
> 
> Dario Bonazza wrote:
> > > I still hope for the flagship they have been working on for so 
> > > long...
> >
> >I'm far less convinced here. I'll only believe a film 
> flagship when I 
> >can touch it in a photo store.
> 
> Looking at the camera sales figures last year, I am convinced 
> that Pentax 
> won't be quite interested in making a FILM flagship anymore.  
> I was told by 
> some folks working in camera stores that D100/D60 outsold 
> F5/EOS1V by a very 
> large scale in 2002.  It seems that photographers who have 
> US$2000 in his 
> pocket would prefer to buy a D-SLR with lower specifications than a 
> top-of-the-line FILM flagship at similar prices (most of them 
> have already 
> owned one).
> 
> I am still dreaming that Pentax will come out with 3 D-SLRs: 
> Auto110D for 
> amateur, MZ-D for serious enthusiasts and 645D for professionals.
> 
> Keep dreaming on flying until the plane crash to earth.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Henry Chu
> 31/1/2003
> 
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