Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/04/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Harrison, Thanks very much. Excellent expanation-- you should teach sir! Based on what you are saying, I have two broken R6's. Amazing. I have had both cameras for seven years without one problem, and within 3 days I have exactly the same problem in both cameras. The tab of which you speak IS loose. It can be moved from the 8 o'clock to the 9:30 position and back with my finger. If it's at 8 o'clock and I depress the loose-feeling DOF lever, the tab moves to 9:30 but does not spring back. I have contacted Sherry Krauter and John Van Stelten by e-mail and Don Goldberg by phone. Don said today that he is back-logged two months and prefers to work on M cameras. This shocked me since, as we all know, the R is the true Leica ;-) Thanks again Harrison. I guess the good news is that I will only ship one box to Sherry or John. I assume, by the way, that despite the coincidence of having this happen both times with the 35/2.0, I do NOT need to send the lens in for repair? May the Force be with you all. Na noo Na noo. John McLeod - ---------- From: "Harrison McClary" <hmcclary@earthlink.net> To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: Re: [Leica] 2nd R6 problem Date: Tue, 7 Apr 1998 23:27:30 +0000 John McLeod wrote: > Well ... today I was shooting with the second body and the same thing > happened -- viewfinder dim when stopped down and a loose DOF lever. Now it > doesn't matter which lens I put on which body -- nothing works. John, When you look at the camera body with the lens off, inside the mount there is a tab which engages the aperture apparatus in the lens. This tab is at about the 8 o'clock position. If this tab is loose and has no resistance you need to send the camera in for repair. There is a spring which keeps this tab in the "open" position until either the DOF lever is engaged, or a photo is made. If the DOF preview is working properly this tab should rotate clockwise up to about the 9:30 position and then spring back when the lever is released. Hope this helps. I know when my R6 went down on me I could actually see the lens stopping down on about 5 or 6 shots before it totally went out on me. I was in Alabama working on a magazine project and thank goodness I had my M6 and R8 as backups. And it was on the last photo for the magazine that it broke, whew that was a slim stroke of luck! And probably the only decent luck I have had in 2 years! Good luck and I hope it is nothing major. Harrison McClary http://people.delphi.com/hmphoto