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[OM] The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (XA2 Test Roll Experience)

Subject: [OM] The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (XA2 Test Roll Experience)
From: Doggre@xxxxxxx
Date: Sat, 31 Aug 2002 06:02:50 EDT
I'm excited!

Bought an XA2/A11 combo off evilBay for a nephew months ago.  Just found it 
under a pile of papers the other night (in its presentation case, clamshell 
closed, so it was well-protected, thank goodness).  I broke one of the 
cardinal rules of evilBay sporting, which is to always test the item as soon 
as it arrives.  Gulp.  I was lucky.  Everything works, as well as looking 
like new (perfect seals, nary a scratch anywhere, etc.).

Took it out to run a test roll of film through it.  The bad: then took the 
film into a mall for 1 hr. developing.  First stop: Kits Camera.  No luck, 
their machine was down and being cleaned.  Grrrr.

The ugly: walked on over to Rite-Aid (uh oh, aren't they in bankruptcy, 
stores closed and still closing all over the country?  I've got a bad feeling 
already).  They take the film, and say to come back in an hour.

I did.  Not ready.

"It'll be about another 20 minutes... there is still somebody ahead of you".
"Do I get a discount for waiting another 20 minutes?"
"Sorry, no."
"Can I get a double set of prints or something?" (I'm learning, as a 
consumer, how to say in new ways every day, "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not 
going to take this any more!!!", and someday, I'm gonna say EXACTLY that, I 
swear)

..... long pause....

"I guess we can do that." 
20 minutes later, there is a line of 6, 7 people at the register.  Again.

No double prints as promised, just one set.  A half hour over the "1 Hr." 
advertised.  No discount.  Grrr.  ASK, before you pay for that "1 Hour" 
service, what the cost is if they don't meet the 1 hour promise.

And TWO of the pics are of a hispanic-looking baby!  I don't recall taking 
photos of a baby in the last couple days.  Heck, I've never even SEEN this 
baby before.  Uh oh, I bet they belong to the young hispanic guy that was 
just ahead of me in line (mind like a steel trap -- damascus steel).  I 
return those two prints to the store.  Grrr (and grrr for him, too, now long 
gone -- wonder if he'll notice he's missing two good shots of his beautiful 
baby?).

The color is off a little in some, maybe all, of the prints... not BAD, just 
not.... correct.  I attribute this to Rite-Aid's sucky machine, not to the 
Fuji film.  The film was a recent buy, had a distant expiration date, and was 
stored in the reefer 'til I put it in the camera yesterday, and temps outside 
were mild.  A little lens flare in a couple of the shots towards the bright 
sun yesterday afternoon, but nothing that looks like a light leak or 
anything.  GOTTA be Rite Aid's fault.

I have concluded, based upon this one never-to-be-repeated experience, that 
Rite-Aid's so-called "1 hr." developing truly SUCKS, in more ways than just 
time.  And that just maybe ALL 1 hour developing sucks.  Back to Prolab for 
me.  I don't NEED l hr. developing, let alone instant feedback.  I need GOOD 
PRINTS!  Next day, next week, I don't care.  Just do it RIGHT.  The 
impatience of the American consumer has companies turning out JUNK, rapidly 
(except in Rite Aid's case, it's junk, slowly).

But.... the good news is, the CAMERA did its job.  Every photo came out fine, 
as far as focus and exposure.  I'm spoiled from looking at OM photos, but 
these aren't bad.

A couple of neat features this camera has: every time you close the 
clamshell, it sends the focus lever back to mid-range, kind of an idiot-proof 
mode (and being a card-carrying, 24 carat idiot...).  At first, I didn't like 
that feature, but after using the camera a few times and getting used to it, 
I can see the Olympus logic: forget to set the focus zone and you'll probably 
get a decent picture anyway.

Also, the "ON" button on the flash doesn't work... until... you: actually 
ATTACH the flash to the camera, open the clamshell, and throw the little 
lever under the lens over to the "Flash" position.  THEN, and ONLY then, the 
button pops up and glows when ready.  Very nice design work, Olympus! (hat 
off and bowing).  Oh, and pushing down the button to turn off the flash 
throws the lever back to the "off" position!  This camera is COOL!

At first, the hair-trigger shutter release surprised me.  But after a few 
pics, I love it.  And talk about quiet.  After the car crash of the OM-2S 
mirror/shutter cacophany (I'm used to it now, and yeah, I kinda like it, 
too), you wonder at first if you've actually taken a picture with the XA.  I 
confess to actually pressing the shutter two or three times at first, not 
catching the very quiet and smooth little "click".  I just didn't think I had 
released the shutter ("Damn!  That's IT?" was kinda my reaction).

What a classic little carry-all-the-time, everywhere, hiking, backpacking, 
backup camera!  Nephew's gonna love this for his birthday coming up.  He'll 
get it early so he can take a pic of his daughter showing a sheep next 
weekend in the county fair!

Now I gotta play with the XA/A16 combo I bought for ME! 

If you don't have an XA in your arsenal, get one!  These things are CLASSICS!

Rich

P.S.  For anyone who may want to see some good XA pics or learn more about 
the XA, XA1,2,3,4 (also good pics of our camera design hero, Maitani-san, and 
an interesting story of how he designed the XA,  on the "design history" 
page:

 <A HREF="http://www.diaxa.com/xa/xastart.htm";>XA Start Page</A> 

http://www.diaxa.com/xa/xastart.htm

(By the way, who created this nice site?  Anyone we know?)

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