Minolta AF-E II
AF-E II image by Lars Holmberg (Image rights) |
Minolta AF-E II (called Freedom 200 in America) is an autofocus compact camera and a simplified successor model to the original AF-E. It has motor drive, built-in flash and runs on either a photolithium battery or common AA batteries. It uses DX-coded films, but only at ISO 100 or ISO 400. It served as the basis for both the fix-focus FS-E II and the all-weather AF-SP.
Specifications
- Lens: 35 mm f/4,5 (4 elements/4 groups).
- Focus: Infrared [autofocus] from 0,95 m to infinity.
- Flash: Built-in, automatically activated with ready-light in finder. Shutter locked while recharging.
- Flash range (at ISO 100): 0,95—3,3 m.
- Metering: EV 9,6–16,2 with ISO 100 film. Narrow metering angle.
- Crippled DX decoding; either ISO 100 or ISO 400. Non-DX films are exposed as ISO 100.
- Film transport: Automatic loading, advance and rewind.
- Power: 1 x 6 V DL223A/BR-P2N lithium battery or 4 x 1,5 V AAA alkaline batteries.
- Dimensions: 132 x 69,5 x 48 mm.
- Weight: 250 g without batteries.
Links
- Minolta AF-E II manual (English, French) (German, Spanish) at Massimo Scotti's Minolta page