6000 Deutschmark, and I got mine in the first German shipping, November 2000.
Brought it home, charged battery, and when a friend visited, decided to shoot a portrait.
Flash meter battery was dead. Replacement battery was DOA as well.
So from experience I decided to try f8.
Fired, looked at it. Half an f-stop off. Corrected, fired again.
That minute I knew Polaroid would go broke soon, and I would
never again have burnt fingers from all those Polaroid chemicals.
Sold the D30 for 1000 Euro when I bought the D60 a year later.
By that time it had more than paid itself by saved film and
development cost for recurring jobs only, and had opened
many more opportunities I never had before.
Plucked quite a few jobs from people who refused to convert to digital.
Some pictures made with the D30 are still in my portfolio.
From todays perspective the D30 was incredibly sluggish, with a tiny display.
But at the time it was about the best one could buy.
The only real grievance was that TTL flash metering never worked
satisfactory on the D30, it was rarely hit and most of the time miss.
The toughest part was paying 1000 Deutschmark for a 1 GB IBM microdrive.
4.5 MB/sec sustained data rate. Sigh......