I'm not sure that I understand the thinking behind this question. I happen
to like 'grizzled' equipment, as you so aptly call it, but I wouldn't keep a
pristine spare for Sunday best. If the grizzled piece of kit is good enough
to use at all, it is good enough to use anywhere, in my opinion. However, I
do understand the motivation behind keeping a spare as a replacement in case
the day-to-day one gets trashed (e.g. eaten by a killer whale).

I don't like new, pristine camera equipment. I can only feel comfortable
with it when it's been through the wars a bit. When I got all my Contax gear
new I felt very intimidated by it until it had been scuffed around on
railway floors, dropped from apple trees, scraped in the bilges of fishing
boats, and generally lived a bit.

--
Cheers,
 Bob 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Fred [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: 11 February 2006 14:37
> To: Collin R Brendemuehl
> Subject: Re: The Sacrifices
> 
> > 1. Which lens are you willing to get beat in a harsh 
> environment when 
> > you don't want to take the nice lenses out to play.
> 
> For me, the harshest environment is whale watching.  For the 
> last few years, my solution to this has been a couple "user" 
> copies of lenses that are really good (which "spares" the 
> prettier copies of those lens designs).
> For several years I have used two bodies, one with a "scuffed 
> up" A* 300/4 and the other with a "grizzled" A 70-210/4.  
> More recently, I have sometimes, for the long lens, used a 
> "veteran of many wars" F* 300/4.5.  In all cases, these 
> lenses are in good shape optically and mechanically - their 
> only defects are cosmetic.  For me, using such extra "user" 
> copies is the best solution...
> 
> Fred
> 
> 
> 
> 

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