On 22/12/06, Bob W, discombobulated, unleashed:

>the thing that made me buy my first Pentax, a new MX, in 1979 was that
>it was small, very well made, at least as good as its rivals from
>Olympus and Nikon, and much cheaper. Those are the distinguishing
>factors for me. I don't think it's been true of Pentax for a very long
>time, although it may be becoming more so with the release of the
>K10D, which seems to be from the old mould.

Very similar time frame and thought. 1980 for me.

>
>The lenses from the pre-plastic era (ie the metal A lenses and
>earlier) seem to me to have a more consistent look & feel than most of
>the more modern lenses too. I find the current line up of lenses very
>confusing.

I don't so much find it as confusing, just that I do not want plastic
lenses. I don't own any. It means more weight, but I don't associate
more weight with being detrimental. All my Pentax and Canon lenses (and
cameras) are metal and heavy and will last longer than I will. Just the
way i like to shoot - with a bit of heft to the gear.

As for the merger, it doesn't really effect me, although we do have an
*ist Ds in the house. I am sad to see Pentax as a small underdog being
merged with another company if for nothing other than it eventually
moulds itself into something else, no matter how much reassurance is
given that it won't. Sure, I have no doubt the Pentax brand will
continue - in a worst-case scenario for at least a few years, probably
much much longer. But after the honeymoon is over, the core people who
made Pentax what it is today (Ken will know of the names) will slowly
and surely be edged or bought out. Hoya will appoint people to take the
company in the direction it wants to go (I have personal experience with
such a merger) and that may or may not coincide with what the fans want.
It may mean much better things in terms of research and development of
new products [from the Imaging section] and so you will probably see
better and greater DSLRs coming on the scene - probably even 'full
frame' 35mm DSLRs - but they won't have the karma that current Pentax
cameras have.

Then again, I have always said that the Pentax of today is a far cry
from the Pentax of 30 years ago. Now comes the next generation. On the
whole I think it is a sad day. But Godders will be pleased - the gear
will still be there and future incarnations will doubtless outweigh
expectations. There's a lot to be pleased about for anyone that likes
good quality photographic equipment decently priced with excellent pedigree.

Pentax is dead. Long live Pentax!

-- 


Cheers,
  Cotty


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