Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]><< I would really choose again for the Nikon 35 Ti, or for the Leica Minilux > (which did not exist in 1994). The results are comparable to the quality > one is expecting from top of range lenses for SLR's or Leica M. > Personally, but this is a matter of taste, I do not like the Contax or > Minolta brands. > >> >Have you seen any test results comparing the Nikon 35Ti and the Leica >Minilux? I thought there was one on the WWW somewhere, but I do not know >where it is. Can anyone help? I owned a Nikon 35Ti for about two and a half years. I found it to be a good camera but ultimately rather frustrating to use ... the control ergonomics are just crummy and it's harder to use the manual overrides than it ought to be. And that's why you're paying such a premium price for this type of camera. I'd picked it over the Contax T2, which was a mistake I realized later. When I tested all three together, I liked both the Leica Minilux and Contax T2 more for some things but picked the Nikon for a couple of features which I ultimately found to be too difficult to use very effectively. Point of fact is that my Leica Minizoom returns a better picture, more consistently, than the 35Ti did. I sold the Nikon as part trade on a Rollei 35 Classic Platinum, which I like a lot more. I'm just a manual camera kind of person. The Sonnar 40/2.8 lens is absolutely superb. The price is also pretty terrifying. But I wanted another high-end automatic compact. When I revisited the available cameras, I picked the Contax TVS. It's only real fault for me is that the Vario-Sonnar 28-56mm f/3.5-6.5 lens is fairly slow (I tend to use it at f/8-11 most of the time; it vignettes a bit at the short focal lengths when wide open). The features are very complete, the images are very crisp and saturated, and the control ergonomics work well for me. If I were concerned about available light needs, I'd go with a fixed focal length model like the Contax T2 (35mm Sonnar f/2.8) or if I wanted the wider angle settings more, the Ricoh GR-1 (28mm f/2.8). The Olympus MJU II is likely an excellent camera as well, in a less expensive category, but I haven't seen its results to compare with others of similar price. It lacks the adjustability of the higher end cameras. But if it's as good or even near as good as the Leica Minizoom, it should be a great picture taker. Godfrey