I think you are wrong. Of course there are way
more than 10 potential buyers. There are MILLIONS
of good and great M42 lenses actually owned by
people. Not a few dozen. There are probably more
m42 lenses in existance than ALL K mount lenses
ever made and they have produced K mount DSLRS
havent they?

Secondly, my comments in that post were made
on relative cost to develop a M42 DSLR from an existing design,
vs developing one from scratch. It would not
be very complex. Its not like this M42 pin actuator mechanism
change is a swiss watch or something, its fairly basic.

jco

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Cory Papenfuss
Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2007 1:25 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: RE: 85mm f1.8 SMCT on ebay : $400+


> I think you are seriously overestimating the
> difficulty in producing/devloping a M42 DSLR, the only signifigant 
> difference from a K100D would be a screw thread flange instead of a K 
> flange and a M42 pin actuator instead of the k lens
> lever actuator. Nearly all of the remaining
> hardware would be the same and the software/firmware
> would be mostly deleting existing features M42 couldnt
> do.
> jco
>

Sounds good on paper.
Conceptually very simple.
Minimal modifications required to an existing camera.
Legal requirements and licensing modification of hardware and software
on 
an existing camera very expensive.
Very expensive to pay engineers to do it.
Very expensive to produce at low volume.

Let's see... a half-dozen engineers at $100K/year for at least 6 months
is 
$300K.  Ramping up production to produce 1000 units, probably $500K (I 
have no firm numbers to support this, but it seems reasonable). 
Licensing modifications from an existing camera.... a $mil or so.  So, 
you've got 1000 cameras that cost $10M to produce.  That's $10K each.

OR, you can pay 20 engineers for a year, making custom ASICs or patching

something together using off-the-shelf components to try to make them
from 
scratch.  Probably quite a bit more than the $10M to make 1000 units. 
Your choice.

If you and the other 10 people on the planet buy theirs, then they'll
have 
to charge $100K per unit to break even.  Economies of scale will not
allow 
it to happen.  Not enough market.

-Cory

-- 

************************************************************************
*
* Cory Papenfuss, Ph.D., PPSEL-IA
*
* Electrical Engineering
*
* Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
*
************************************************************************
*


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