Yashica's popular budget C/Y SLR — the FX-3, mechanical shutter, TTL LED metering, Zeiss compatible.
The Yashica FX-3 is a 35mm film SLR introduced at the end of the 1970s as an affordable, mechanically operated body on the Contax/Yashica (C/Y) bayonet. It became a popular choice for students and enthusiasts because it took both Yashica ML lenses and Carl Zeiss T* optics while remaining low in cost, and it anchored a long-running family that later included the FX-3 Super and FX-3 Super 2000.
The FX-3 is a C/Y bayonet SLR for 35mm film with a mechanically timed vertical focal-plane shutter, so the shutter fires without a battery; the cell powers only the through-the-lens meter. Metering is centre-weighted TTL with an LED match display in the viewfinder to guide manual exposure, and exposure is set entirely by the photographer. The all-mechanical shutter is a defining feature that distinguishes it from the electronic C/Y bodies.
The FX-3 suits students, travellers and anyone wanting a dependable manual camera that keeps working with a dead meter battery. Its light body and simple controls make it easy to carry, and it is a common recommendation as an inexpensive way into the Zeiss and Yashica ML lens systems. The trade-off is fully manual operation with no automatic exposure, which is exactly what many buyers of this body want.
On the used market the FX-3 is a sought-after budget C/Y body, so check condition carefully. Foam light seals and mirror-damper foam usually need replacing. Test the mechanical shutter across all speeds, and since it fires without a battery, a dead cell only disables the meter rather than the camera. Confirm the LED meter responds when a battery is fitted, inspect the prism for haze or desilvering, and check the film advance, rewind and bayonet lock for smooth operation.