Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/02/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]As long as we're all engaging in embarassing outbursts about our wishes for new cameras, I may as well make a confession. I use an M2 a lot, but I don't make a secret of the fact that I also use an R6 and R6.2. I like these cameras just fine, and I use them all the time. But here's my shameful confession: a few months ago I got a bargain on a Leicaflex SL and 50 Summicron, so I bought them. I took the camera out to photograph industrial landscapes, and I was just enchanted by it. The SL feels wonderful in a way that an M2 feels wonderful and for some reason, an R6.2 doesn't. It's hard to describe. I really love the shutter speed knob, for example, and the way the film advance lever feels when you wind on the next frame. I love the way it feels so wonderfully solid -- not that the R6.2 doesn't feel solid -- the SL just feels more so. The SL is of course somewhat impractical, not taking some of the newer lenses and requiring weird old batteries for the meter and not having mirror prefire. It's big and heavy. But I do love the thing! It's just the way it feels. If I had my druthers, Leica would re-introduce the SL-2, updated only with mirror prefire, a meter that takes modern batteries, and a modern lensmount. TTL flash wouldn't hurt, but I rarely use it and I can live without it. The SL-3 wouldn't do anything that an R6.2 can't, but it would feel wonderful in a way the R6.2 doesn't. Would I pay the obscene prices that such a magnificently built camera would cost? $4,000 or whatever? You bet I would. I will probably never buy an R camera with an electronic shutter. If there isn't a mechanical successor to the R6.2, I won't ever buy something based on the R8 chassis. But an SL-3 -- now that I would buy. I'd probably buy two. - -Patrick