Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> I was talking to a knowledgeable collector of Nikon rangefinders > today, who claimed that Nikon SP and S3 were more collectible and 100 > times better made cameras. He was saying that Nikon started making > them right after the War when they had the highest quality metal for > guns. I have heard some say that Nikon lenses were better than Leica > or Contax lenses but this is the first time to hear that Nikon > rangefinders were much better made than Leica. > What is your opinion? I hope this would not make too much of > uproars. David, The Nikon rangefinders are pretty much mechanical copies of the Leica and cosmetic copies of the Contax (I'm pretty sure that Contax accessories and lenses fit them, and vice versa). I'm pretty sure that the shutter in the Nikon RF cameras is copied from Leitz, and this basic mechanism is what is used in the Nikon F, on which Nikon's reputation is largely based. I'm waiting to see what Marc says in reply to your message. Another thing, which I'd be interested to hear Marc's comments on, is how extensively they were distributed since they violated international patents. Were these cameras sold in Europe, for instance? > He was saying that Nikon started making > them right after the War when they had the highest quality metal for > guns. I think that this is a stretch. Look at the Nikon Historical Society's website: http://romdog.com/nikonhs/ There is some information in there about the problems of trying to restore early Nikon RF cameras by rebuilding from parts, because there were so many inconsistancies in the manufacturing process and materials from batch to batch of the same model. Even things like replacing burred screw heads is a big deal since they are so hard to match. Because of this, the site gives the impression that Nikon weenies are very critical about whether the paint and plating match on all of a camera's parts. Because Japan needs to import most of the materials used for camera manufacture, were they really sitting on huge piles of quality materials right after loosing a long and costly war? As Japan's sphere of influence shrank towards the end of WWII, they would have been increasingly cut off from their sources of supply, and stockpiles would dwindle. Please correct me if I'm wrong. Having said the above, Nikon RFs are very solid cameras and some people still use them regularly. You can still get them repaired if you use them. They just don't inspire the same reverence in me that I feel towards Leica, Zeiss and Rollei stuff. Call me a snob, but the fact that many of the Japanese cameras from this era use stolen technology, and the fact that they undermined the European camera industry by offering copies of European cameras at a fraction of the price, dampens the enthusiasm I might otherwise feel for them. This is not to say that they didn't do some things right (like the way Nikon cultivated the pro market) and that the European camera companies didn't do a lot to contribute to their own downfall as market leaders. Nikon RF cameras do command high prices as collectables, if this is what you judge them by, and Nikon weenies can be just as fanatical as Leica weenies. They were not manufactured for as long as Leica and Zeiss RFs were, so there are a lot fewer of them, and there are some very unusual and rare models. Scarcity and variety are what make collectables collectable! - - Paul