Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dante, it just goes to show that handling is a subjective thing...But I do have one concern. Why is a a Konica HexarRF, made in Japan, with electronic shutter and some fairly standard specs and no TTL, worth as much or more than a Nikon F100? The profit margin for Konica has to be tremoundous! I just can't imagine wanting a rangefinder AND aperture priority bad enough to pay such a price for a 3rd tier manufacturers product. By all it's specs this camera should be selling for 600-700 dollars. I really think Cosina hit closer to the mark with their offering. A lower priced alternative to a leica. (And if all the news about screw mount lenses available in America soon is true I know of a 35mm Summicron asph SM that is calling my name!) At a lower price the Hexar really would be a consideration. You can pick up a nice used M6 for 1200.00 that will hold it's value over time, or one can choose the Hexar. Will the Hexar hold up as well over the next 30 years? I don't know. Best wishes Dan > > >In a message dated 2/14/00 11:54:53 AM, dstate1@hotmail.com opined: >(and Dante, who passed over an M6TTL for the RF this week, replies, having >blown through sixteen rolls of film testing the RF over the weekend, in >temperatures from 75 degrees F down to 15:) > ><< I had my first opportunity to fondle the new Konica Hexar RF over the >weekend. A camera that was described by the dealer as the Konica M6...what >a load of hooey that is.. > >You're right. It's not an M6. The finish and materials are nicer than a >black >chrome M6. The styling is cleaner. The controls are better. The on/off >switch >is better. The loading is easier, with one hand. You can see the 28mm >frames. >You can shoot wide-open with high-speed film. The shutter is stepless and >quartz-timed. You can synch at twice the speed and shoot at twice the >speed. >The metering pattern is more usable. No, it's not better. > > >>>Sadly the camera looks a lot better on the net than it does in your >hands. > >The squared frame makes is look like a plank of wood, and it feels a bit >like one in your hands. > >If it's a plank of wood, then planks of wood have much better natural grip >surfaces than do the M6. I think that it's pretty tough to hold onto >something as small as the right end of an M6 - they're not designed for >bigger hands. > > >>>The lens mounted in a very un-Leica way...Sticky! It felt like I was >jamming a chisel into a block of wood.. > >Zzzzz. I have one in front of me, and it's pretty hard to duplicate your >negative experience with this. And it's irrelevant to any performance >measure. > > >>>The viewfinder was bright and clear, with only a hint of pincussion >distortion of the 28mm frames. The rangefinder was a little antsy. It may >be the shorter base line, but it was easy to overshoot your target of >focus. > The biggest flaw with the finder to me was the lack of contrast in the >focusing patch. Focusing an M6 is really easier in low contrast situations. > >This is a nice rationalization, but the M6 patch is neither as bright nor >as >flare resistant. I have tried for about a week to flare out the RF on the >Hexar, and it so far hasn't worked. When I compared it to an M6 directly, >the >M6 came out quite poorly in the flare department. There is nothing lacking >about the RF, and if you can see, you can focus. > > >>>My biggest gripe is with the shutter speed dial placement. It is a >thumb >wheel and it is very difficult to work the dial while keeping your index >finger on the shutter button. Clearly Konica expects users to keep this >thing in Aperture Priority most of the time. The meter is a bit hard to >get >used to, with shutter speed numbers dancing up and down on the left side of >the veiwfinder. > >Three responses to that: >(1) Shutter speed numbers dancing in the margin shouldn't be hard to get >used >to for anyone who has bought a camera in the past twenty years. And if you >compare that to an M6, I'd rather have numbers in the margin, which I can >ignore, rather than 3 LEDs right in my field of vision. In addition, since >you know what speed the shutter is at, you can tell just how low it is >going. > >(2) The shutter speed wheel is fine and so is the EV comp dial. In fact, >the >key advantage of the placement of the controls is that you can switch the >camera on and off by feel, which is not possible with the M6TTL. > >(3) And if you have AE with exposure lock and a thumbwheel for >compensation, >why does it matter if you never take it out of AE? If you're going to pull >out a handheld meter, it is easy enough to set the shutter speed by hand. > >The shutter and motor were about as quiet as the Contax G's, and >the quality of materials was similar but without the beautiful shape and >color. > >The G2's color is a liability. And it's materials simply aren't as nice. >And, >frankly, it's pretty ugly compared to the Hexar. > > >>>I know this sounds pretty negative, but I really expected more >considering >the hype and the price of this camera (1950.00 with 50mm F2). The handling >really leaves something to be desired, especially considering the fact that >all they had to do was match a camera that has been on the market since the >50's. > >I would expect, for $2200, more than a camera body made in the 1950s. If >it's >not a match, I would have to ask you where the waiting list for M6s is. > >If you have bigger hands, the handling is superior to the M6, which I >suspect >was a continuation of the design of the M3, which in turn is a lot like the >screwmounts, which are TOO DAMN SMALL TO HOLD. > > >>>The excitment over this fairly average camera really points out the >void >in >the market for an Aperture Priority M...Leica, are you listening? Contax >should also be looking at this market. I'll wager that a manual focus G >would out-sell the auto be a large margin.. > >Which is why Contax is making it? Leica is probably not listening. > >Cheers >Dante ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com