Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/28
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>> Kevin wrote: I wanted to know, some tips on how to keep my M6 in top shape when it arrives. 1. I've heard of people putting some kind of sleave on the strap rings to protect the camera. Any details? >> 2. I've heard that you can burn a hole in your curtain from the sun. How careful do I need to be? Do I have to keep the sun out of any part of the frame while shooting? >> 3. The lens seems like it has grease in the focusing grooves. Does it tend to collect dirt over time? >> 4. Any other tips so that it stays nice for years? Jim Brick responded: <<<<There is only one answer to your question(s). Use the hell out of your M6. Carry it everywhere, crank that film through, shoot shoot shoot. Don't baby it. The more it's used, the better it will perform. And the better it will look and feel. A happy M6 is a well used M6. If you want to have a "perfect" M6 for all time. Buy another and lock it in a safe.>>>>>>> Mark Rabiner responded: <<<<<<It says in the little book that comes with the lens that the grease is OK. I think it said "don't use too much Vaseline" but I'm making it too easy for some people out there. I've seem my lenses come like that too and it all blends in somehow and is OK. A case will turn your camera into an awkward clunker but will sure protect it. Black tape will protect your camera from a variety of gamma rays, the van Allen belts you name it.,, thieves, over envious Yuppies. The red dot is not good to stare at for long periods of time. You close your eyes fast and it is a green dot and that is disconcerting. Like Jim has just implied: make it a user. It's a tool. A hammer not a glass unicorn.>>>>>> >>> Hi Kevin, The above comments from working user photographers is excellent advice, follow it and you'll have many years of fun and great picture taking. If you don't use it, like they say,......."You'll loose it!" Like you'll be so concerned about a teensy mark here or there, you'll put it on the shelf and never take it out of the box. >>> Use it every opportunity you can, never leave home without it, have it at your side like your clothes and you'll begin to amass some good photo material. I mean, did you buy it to sit on the shelf and look pretty, to show friends and family your new toy? Or did you buy it to take pictures? >>> To hell with all the advice about cases required, sleeves for the neck straps, worries about burning holes in the curtain, keeping the lens cap on etc. Just work the hell out of the camera and it'll give you many years of excellent picture taking opportunities. >>> Of course it cost a bundle, but that doesn't mean you have to baby it like some jewel of the Nile, it means handlng it and using it with common sense and that's the operative advice one can give...."Common Sense!" Obviously you're not going to use it for opening beer bottles or hammering nails :) >>> So load it up, get out side or some place and start excerising those shutter speeds and apertures! Good hunting and successful pictures. >>> And of course, use an old well worn pair of "clean " soft undershorts to keep the lens clean and the body wiped off occaisionaly! :) This is known as the TG method of cleaning. :):) ted >>> Ted Grant This is Our Work. The Legacy of Sir William Osler. http://www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant ======== >>>>>> ====================== Ted - that's conclusive in regards to the recent (and not recent) MF, LF, Leica 'debate'. Comparisons and justifications all made in the words of tools for occassions, as optical - don't compare apples and oranges - MF by "definition" will produce the 'better' (?) "shraper' image. There's this easy answer that look at at LF at 24x30 and 35mm... Or Ansel is the greatest - ect... I think you hit it right on - perhaps not the sort of response you might offer in this case, but...so... It puts the emphasis where it is, for some at least. Try putting LF into the above and see how strange it is. You can't live like that. You can go on a shoot somewhere, but not go everywhere and shoot. It becomes part of one's eye ('specially if tape gets stuck) - it's as familiar as film. And it's yours! Rule A and B sound great - whether these be related to the use or the care of the camera. This extends... workshops, classes, documented techniques, (ahh - art directors) - but when you have your (preferred or) M6 on you it's your game, nothing gives this much freedom within the capacity to produce excellent images in uncountable ways. All else is good, but relates to occasions. As to the case of other cameras fitting this as fully, well, what's to say? Nothing... btw, there is something satisfying in being the sole subject who's broken in your stuff...