Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/01/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hello Folks and Happy New Year - I've go a small problem and rhought someone might have a suggestion. I have a 50 Summicron (black, Canada, sn/2.9 mil.) - 3rd version. This lens is well-used but was overhauled by Leica Northvale about a year ago. The problem is that the detents for aperture setting are so worn as to be almost non-existent. I mean there is not much of a click anymore and it takes no effort to move the aperture ring. In itself this is not much of a problem, however, the proximity of the aperture ring to the focus lever is a problem. I was shooting in Boston the other day and had set my aperture/shutter speed combo set and put the camera to my eye, focused and released the shutter on one of those 'decisive moment' images. To my horror, the aperture moved from f/4 to f/8 during focusing and before exposure. This is not a once-in-a-while occurrence, it happens constantly if I'm not ever aware of its potential. It's not that the two functions are 'connected by friction,' it's simply because of their proximity to one another and the way the finger moves the focusing lever or ring. It's somewhat of a design problem but I suspect more of an issue of wear - a less-used identical lens does not do this since the click detents are tight (I've tried my buddy's). Does anyone have any practical suggestions? I had thought that Leica would have worked some minor miracle during a CLA, but no. This has become more than a little irritating and makes it somewhat frustrating since we want to believe that well-used-but-not-abused Leica gear will function well for a loong time. Later the same day I used my son's (originally mine since new) 1966 Spotmatic with 55/1.8, through which I had put many thousands of rolls of film for 20 years. I was simply amazed of the lens' flawless functioning despite IT'S equally hard use, and of its lack of similar type of annoyance (or of any other anomalies for that matter). I could hear the ghost of my father (who was a Leica/Rollei user) over my shoulder saying for the millionth time: "it's not the camera..." He had worked in the industry for 40 years and in his later years got royally frustrated by Leica's pricing, considering what he believed to be their failure in producing products of quality sufficiently superior to the Japanese to warrant the enormous difference and this appears to me as an example of what he meant. Sorry for this digression but I'm annoyed by this $500 lens' behavior (and the photos it costs me) and really need to vent. TIA, Curt Elizabeth Mei Wong Henry Curtis Miller, M.P.A. Pittsfield, Massachusetts In the Berkshires, next door to Tanglewood