Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> Just out of curiosity, since you live in Sweden, is Hasselblad stuff > cheaper in Sweden then in other countries? > First off, I'm not into Hasselblad (yet) so take what I say with a pinch of salt. Hasselblad *seems* to be cheaper in Sweden than in many other countries, dispite the fact that Sweden is a very expensive country for capital goods. I don't know about the new stuff, but the second hand gear seems to be somewhat cheaper than the comparable listings in US magazines that I buy. Perhaps one of the major benefits is that there appear to be a fairly large proportions of amateurs who use Hassy's in Sweden, compared to abroad. For SH purposes, this translates into (typically) less used and worn gear. For some prices, check out the following web sites: http://home3.swipnet.se/~w-39670/lager.html#hasselblad http://www.schoenherrsfoto.se/beg.html http://www.secondhandphoto.se/hasselblad.htm The usual disclaimers apply: I have no affiliation with these or any other shops. For price conversion: All prices are in SEK (Swedish krona). At the time of writing, 1 US$ = 8 SEK, roughly. So, a price of 9,500 SEK for a SWC in B- condition would translate to US$ 1187. Swedish second hand stuff usually follows the following grading scale: AA: New (with papers and box) A: Like New or Mint (no or extremely faint signs of use) B: Extremely good condition, few signs of use C: Good condition, "normal" signs of use D: Heavily used but functioning E: Heavily worn, typically without any guarantees, or not working. The usual + or - nonsense applies... M. - -- Martin Howard, Grad. Schl. for Human-Machine Interaction, | HMI/IKP, Linkoping University, SE-581 83 Linkoping, Sweden.| Just Tel: +46 13 28 5741; Fax: +46 28 2579; ICQ: 354739 | say "DOOH" E-mail: marho@ikp.liu.se; www.iav.ikp.liu.se/staff/marho/ +------------