Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/11/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>> >>M4 won't take harm from that, M6 will. >>Some unit inside the M6 is designed so weak that there >>is the danger the shutter speed setting (or what the heck this is >>called) will be damaged if the M6 is used with intermediate speeds. > >I've thought about this and asked my Mom, who BTW is one helluva Electrical >Engineer, wether or not it could cause a problem. She pointed out that the >meter reads the speed setting in absolute values, i.e. 1/125, 1/8, etc.. >When the dial is moved from one of these values to the adjacent value a >circuit is switched to the new value. This is done by rotating a contact >into physical proximity of a stationary contact. It is feasible that at some >point in the rotation the contacts for the previous speed and that for the >newly selected speed are BOTH in contact with the stationary contact. >Jamming it between speeds may prolong this and fry the little bastard. Not a >fact, just a possibility. My Mom, you gotta love her. > >ben But what about mechanical harm? Does the mechanism that controls shutter speed allow intermediate settings without risking damage? The first quoted post above suggests that the M6 is "designed so weak" that there is a danger. My M6 doesn't seem weakly designed; I'd be curious to hear a more concrete answer. - -Charlie - -------------------------------------------- Charles E. Dunlap Earth Sciences Deptartment University of California Santa Cruz, CA 95064 Tel.: (408) 459-5228 Fax.: (408) 459-3074 - --------------------------------------------