The X-700 was aimed to appeal to the widest range of photographers possible. It also introduced through-the-lens (TTL) of the film flash metering in Aperture Priority or Program mode, which adjusted exposure and flash output automatically to produce a perfect exposure, without the user having to adjust anything at all, and added exposure lock and interchangeable focusing screens to the XG-M's features. This program mode was referred to as "MPS" or Minolta Program System. The X-700 used the basic body of the XG-M with electronically-controlled stepless speeds but added full program autoexposure in addition to the XG-M's aperture priority and metered manual modes. ![]() ![]() It was the top model of their final manual-focus SLR series before the introduction of the auto-focus Minolta Maxxum 7000. The Minolta X-700 is a 35 mm single-lens reflex film camera introduced by Minolta in 1981.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |