Minolta XD 7 With the XD 7 Minolta got it all right in 1977. In those days this was a very futuristic camera, because it possessed automatic exposure with aperture and shutter priority as well as
fully metered manual exposure. In factthe later models with the green 's' (shutter priority mode) and the green '125' (1/125th shutter speed) wereearly program automats. Puteverything on green and the camera starts with 1/125th shutter speed and chooses the aperture. But if it's not possibleto achievethe correctexposure it changes shutterspeed until exposure is right. In this casethe camera chooses aperture and shutterspeed: programmed exposure. Besides this the XD 7's got moreexposuretricks on its sleeves. It's called the 'final check'. After stopping the lens down the camera performs a final checkto ensurethattheexposure will be correct. This means exposure is very, very good. Even compared to todays computer steered measure-it-all fully automatic machines. But not only electronics ticked all the right boxes, also mechanically this is an extraordinary camera. With its 'full metal jacket' Minolta withstood thetendency to usethe cheaper plastics of for examplethe XG 9. In fact it's so good that again Leica tookthe XD 7 to bethe base of a Leica camera, the R4. So this is a solid metal camera, with a nice look and feel. It's right in every way, heavy but nottoo heavy, large but smaller and more comfortablethan the XE-1. This is the Minolta camera I used most. I boughtthis in 1981 and for years I only used this beauty. Today this still is a very usable camera. If you don't mind manual focus anyway. With autowinder D (seethe pictures) it's still a fast camera. One of Minolta's best! You can find the manual here (by the way XD 11 is the American ტელ: 551 90-93-89