Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>. The resulting >leakage current decreases battery life often by more then half to what is >expected. Use a dry clean Hanky or other cloth to wipe the prints of as soon as >possible. > >Regards, Horst Schmidt I agree with your use of a capital aitch in Hanky. I used to think that the Hanky was simply a place to blow one's nose. Until I travelled in Africa and realised that leaving your snot in a special cloth that you kept in your pocket and carried around with you was just a weird quaint and disgusting western habit. This absurd realisation helped me to reappraise the role of the ancient square of cloth in my pocket. Nowadays I still always carry a Hanky but am extremely reluctant to store snot in it. It has become primarily a remover of fingerprints, pollution and general crud from spectacles, Leica rangefinder windows, filters, lenses, negatives, scanners and other modern delicate surfaces. I am lucky to have many very old soft and knackered Hankies that excel at these important everyday tasks. The Hanky is a vital piece of equipment! When I started to use a Leica rangefinder (only January 1998) it took me a while to learn how to handle it, pick it up, change the film, without smearing fingerprints all over all those optical surfaces. A t-shirt will get you through the night, but the Hanky is the donkey's bollocks. Unfortunately there are no brand names or collectible status-conferring types of Hanky, so I can't see much mileage in this. (On the other hand, I once met a man who claimed to once have owned Napoleon's penis, so why not his Hanky?) Alex (glad to be able to share that one at last!) ____________________________________________ alex@zetetic.co.uk http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~abrattell/ ___________________________________________