Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/10/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi there Joseph, Many thanks for the response, I was wondering about the deafening silence until now. Please do pass the ideas on: if Cosina would like to do it they can, please ask them to forward my royalty checks promptly :=) What I was trying to suggest, though, was for the LEICA company to respond to the new M competition, with affordable, user-oriented lenses that have adequate performance for those of us using 400 speed films. Most documentary/PJ Leica users rarely go below this, even Ektachrome 200 usually gets pushed a stop. This means that I have 24/2.8 and 35/1.4 asph lenses that are just a lot higher performing than I need. My Leica 28/2.8 lenses produce negs that are indistinguishable from my canon 28/2.8 at 5.6, 8, etc. Of my 50's, my favorite is the last version Canon 1.8 ($125). Can't see any difference from the current version 'cron. Wide open the old 28 vignettes a tad. What I want Leica to do is stop chasing optical performance that matters zilch to 99.999% of users (film and technique being the limiting factors), and offer a different kind of relevant, useable performance. The lenses suggested below would really distinguish Leica from the new, appropriate-quality Japanese offerings, rather than compete with them, and would also be low cost enough that actual photographers could buy them new. How about bundling a "PJ kit" of resurrected 35 non-asph cron, New Collapsible 50 'lux, and New Collapsible 90 T-E M, plus M6TTL or M6TTL HM for (say) $4500-$5000. Not a collectible. A User-oriented kit. Make a run of say 500 kits, and market them thru' PDN, MPW, Missouri, whatever, where aspiring young, new Leica users can be easily reached. Comes in a very plain black Domke satchell with the new ttl flash, and special Leica-logo'd tri-x canisters. Light, compact, and USER-ORIENTED. All in black. No passport. A "PJ kit-lite" of M6TTL HM + New Collapsible 50 or M6TTL 35 non-asph 'cron for (say) $3000; the purchase includes a range of "Option Certificates" to upgrade to the full kit by, for example trading back the 50 'cron, and handing over the cash difference at any time in the next 3 years. What do you think of that idea FOR LEICA to build on their real strength, the M series? As the R8 becomes the M5 of the reflexes (and maybe the last), this could be a real winner, IMHO. Apologies, as ever, to the majority, for the on-topic post. Alistair - -----Original Message----- From: Dr. Joseph Yao [mailto:yaojkfdr@netvigator.com] Sent: Friday, October 29, 1999 2:00 PM To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us Subject: Re: NEW LENS OFFERING RE: [Leica] Collapsible 50 summicron Alistair, Excellent ideas! Would you like me to pass them onto Cosina when I visit them next time? I am sure they can materialise your suggestions effeciently and inexpensively. Regards, Joseph Stewart, Alistair wrote: > > Luggers > > How about a new version of the collapsible summicron, with today's glass and > coatings? Separate clip-on metal hood like the IROOA (designed only for the > 50/2, NOT also for the 35/2), and focusing tab. Goes down to .7m, comes with > goggles to get you to 19". ONLY AVAILABLE IN BLACK. > :=). Oh all right, in chrome too, for $100 more. Comes with a removable M > mount held on with a grub screw, which turns it into a screw mount when > removed (Collectors subsidize we users) - like the early M-lenses. Or it > could be a straight LTM lens with normal adapter, you select the right one > for M3/6.85 or all other M bodies. No infinity lock. 39mm filter. The shade > would be ok for 35 summarons which were e39. > > Retails for the regular 50 'cron price sans goggles, or $200 more with > goggles. Chrome finish adds another $100. > > OR let's get really imaginative... > > Collapsible 50 'lux ASPH with goggles. ONLY IN BLACK so it is light enough > to use all day. 42 mm filter, the rest of the features as above, except well > designed cut-out in shade. > > Collapsible 90/2.8 skinny tele-elmarit M. Keep it e39. > > All these would enable the travelling documentary PJ to do their jobs with > less weight and volume to carry, and no loss in quality, indeed a gain in > quality for the 50 'lux > > OK, go to go and take some valium now. > > What a pink sunset we have here in Chicago :=) > > best > > Alistair