There are a whole bunch of excellent and affordable MC and MD lenses available on the used market. The camera features Minolta’s MC/MD mount. If you buy from a respected camera retailer, you’ll likely pay more, but they will have thoroughly checked out the camera and accurately rated its condition.Īutofocus and lenses: No autofocus. Costs range from $15 for a body to $100 for a kit with a good 50mm f/1.7 lens. KEH, B&H, and Adorama sometimes have them in stock as well. You can find them all over eBay and in pawn shops. Happily, the cost of an XG1-neither an exotic nor rare camera-has remained fairly stable. The XG1 didn’t have quite the same effect on photography.Ĭurrent cost and availability: 35mm shooting is becoming en vogue again, so prices for used film gear have been steadily increasing. So the same year that the XG1 rolled off assembly lines, Eddie Van Halen erupted on Van Halen’s debut album and changed guitar playing forever. A later model called the XG-1(n), with a revamped body, replaced the XG1.ĭates: Manufactured from 1978 to 1981. Because the XG 1 and the XG-1 are essentially the same camera and function the same way, I’m going to sidestep the issue altogether and just call it the XG1 throughout this review. Minolta, however, included the hyphen in marketing material for both versions. Name: Is this camera officially called the Minolta “ XG 1” or “ XG-1” or “ XG1”? You’ll see it written all three ways, and the confusion comes because the first version of the camera has no hyphen on its front plate and a later version of the camera added the hyphen (along with a new company logo).