Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/06/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have a very similar problem (including the bleeding across the interframe spacing) with my M3. The suggestion that it might correlate to changing lenses seems to hold for my prints. I have the problem across rolls but it seemed intermittant. I thought it might have to do with flare from a screw that was backing out (eventually lost) inside the shutter/lens cavity. However, I don't think that explains the light fogging between frames. I reviewed my negatives and it does seem to happen during lens changes (and possibly with very intensely lighted pictures). I noticed the problem on my last travels and I was constantly going from dark to daylight subjects nearly from frame to frame - so there were times I wondered into broad daylight after some dark wide-open pub shooting. I can't examine the problem any more. I had to send my camera in for repair after losing a screw (shutter release went inoperative) on the 58th frame after a Leitz shutter repair and CLA on the body. I'll let you know what Leitz has to say about my problem. I sent them prints and negatives that illustrate the flare. BTW - in my case the flare is across the long dimension of my negatives, at the "top" of a horizontal picture (bottom of shutter?). Regards, Roger D Khong wrote: > > Did the affacted frames occur around the time you made a lens change? If > so then you have might a light leak somewhere. > > Dan K. > > >My M6 is making one of its rare appearances away from the Leica repair > >department, so I took it to the Paris Air Show as my working camera. > > > >Looking through the resulting photos, I'm puzzled to see that one just > >three of the 73, there is a blue haze and general washed-out look on > >the right-hand side of the frame. > > > >Two of these were taken with a Russian 9cm f2 Jupiter, so I was > >tempted to blame the lens, but the third was taken with my normal 5cm > >Summicron. > > > >All three of the pics in question were taken with a shade in place and > >either in the shade or with the sun behind me, so I don't think it's > >flare. The only other possibility I can think of is a light leak - but > >if that was the case I'd expect to see many more affected frames given > >that I had the camera around my neck and with the lens cap off for > >several hours outdoors, and had about half a dozen lens changes > >outdoors. > > > >Can anyone suggest an alternative reason for the problem? > > > >Regards, > > > >Doug Richardson > > > >