Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1996/12/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The other day dropped by a local dealership to check some equipment and stumbled to the Leica representative there with a shining R8 on the desk. Looks massive and feels solid. Almost as heavy as my F-1's but somehow does not feel quite as invincible. All the electronics in there unconsciously still makes me worry a bit. I couldn't throw this around the same way, freeze and fry it and so on. Inspite of looking ergonomic I'm not sure it really is. My hands are average size male hands and it didn't sink naturally in the hand as some bodies do (F-1, Nikon F-3 etc.). Has something to do with the center of gravity (maybe a bit higher than usual) as well as the contours. Quite personal of course. The finder is bright and displays at the bottom of it exemplary. Not a HP finder though, I had to wiggle a bit to see it all. Dials on top logical and easy to operate. Didn't put my gloves on though - then there might have been some problems as the dials are sunk in deep. Double tripod socket at the bottom as well as some other stuff I didn't have time to figure out. Shutter release firm and predictable. In the mirror chamber the meter curtain presumably has even more "dents" to collect more light for the meter to chew. Don't know about the EV's - didn't take the brochure as I'm not planning of getting one. So the bottom line: looks like a fine piece of electromechanical engineering. Superb quality and finish as expected. But looking at it couldn't help thinking about where the SLR-photography is going and the point of R's. In comparison to say F5 the R8 feels almost like a designer item. Is its only real justification simply the fact that R-glass exists and one needs a box behind it? Never expected anything revolutionary. OM-4 wasn't anything novel either but somehow it thrilled me at least a little bit... Ok, that was just a quick impression and I'm sure there will be many happy R8 shooters. Incidentally my preferred tools are SLR's with M4P thrown in for special occasions. So don't blame me on rangefinder bias. Regards, Kari