Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have now had my Bessa-R for a couple of weeks and I thought it would be a good time to give a further "user" report on it. Other tasks has kept me busy so I have only had a chance too shoot about 30-35 rolls with it, mainly with the 35/2,5, but also with the 50/1,5 Nokton and the 75/2,5 as well as with a 50/2 Summar and a couple of Canon RF lenses (50/1,4 and 35/2 and 35/2,8). The more I use it, the more impressed I am with things like the finder, bright, snappy and very easy to see. I have gotten used to the fact that the rangefinder patch is easy to loose, unless your eye is centered in the finder. The 35 frames leaves plenty of room around it for judging what is going on and what is heading into the frame. I tried my 28/2,8 Ricoh on it and even without aux. Finder I could frame quite well. No rangefinder is 100% perfect for exact framing anyway and I rather have more on the neg. than in the finder. You can crop, but it is difficult to add to the image. The meter is remarkably precise, as good as the one in the M6 TTL's and, although the LED's are bright I have gotten used to them. The switch-able frames are easy to use, although one has to check that they are in the right setting after someone else has played with the camera! The filmadvance still has a "ratchy" sound to it - not a Leica smoothness, although it has quieted down a bit after the 30 or so rolls. The advance arm does not have a ratchet on it; you have to pull it fully to advance the film, no short, multiple stroke advances. It also stops in the "track" when you get to the end of the roll and only springs back to start position once the camera is unloaded. It is a minor point, but being used to M's I notice it every time I come to the end of a roll. The camera is lighter than an M camera and I keep thinking that I have left something behind when I carry it. It does not feel flimsy, just lightweight. The release is a bit stiffer than the M-camera, but very predictable. The meter turns on after you press down about ½ way on the release and then you just push further for exposure. Very few unintentional exposures due to too much pressure, even by people who does not know how to use a shutter release activated meter. More people trigger the shutter on the M6 that way than the Bessa-R. You can feel the difference in material between the M-camera and the Bessa-R. The M's feel solid and substantial, the Bessa-R is lighter in the feel (but at 1/3 the price, that is to be expected). It couples nicely to any screwmount lens and the focus is precise, at least within the range of its short base rangefinder. The only 90 I have in 39mm screw is a 90/4 Elmar and that one works fine on it, but then f4 is slow enough to compensate for a short base finder. No noticeable drain on the battery, even after 35 rolls and innumerable applications of the meter by others and me who have played with the camera. The most interesting thing is letting a shooter, who is used to the M handle the Bessa-R. The first reaction is "What a nice finder" and the second is "How much and when can I get one!". None of them would give up the M-camera, but they regard the Bessa-R as a perfect body for those screwmount lenses we tend to hoard. Next week I will put a 50/3,5 Elmar on it and try it with the classic Leica lens. The 35/2,5 is remarkably good, no, it is not a 35/2 Asph, but apart from some softness in the corners wide open, it is sharp and contrasty as well as flare-free (which is good, as my lens did not have a shade with it). Initially I thought it was a big lens, but now I have gotten used to it and it is comfortable to hold and use. Like any "short" lens, takes a while to get used to the aperture-ring and the focus-ring being so close. They are distinctly different in feel, but occasionally I have gripped one when I was looking for the other one. If this lens can come in at the price that I was told, about $275-300 it is a great deal, particularly if you have a IIIf or IIIC and need the 35 focal length. It is better than the 35/3,5 Summaron, the 35/2,8 Canon and on par with the 35/2 Canon. I had to go back and look at my notes to check which roll was shot with the 3rd generation Summicron and the 35/2,5 Skopar! Wide-open the 35/2 is better, but with Delta 100 in FX37 (not a developer known to "soften" the image), they are pretty much equal at 4/5,6/8. Ergonomically the 35/2 is better, or it could be that after 40+ years of using it I am more used to it. But I am impressed with the 35/2,5 and tomorrow I am putting it on a M2 to see what that combo feels like! The more I use the Bessa-R, the more I think it would make a terrific entry level M-camera. If it could be made and sold at $6-650, it would get a lot of people excited. It is all mechanical, it is small, it is cheap (relatively so) and it with a M-mount it would be a great 1st M-camera or a back-up for an already confirmed M shooter. I like testing cameras; it gives me a great excuse for working around and shooting and still feel like I am doing something useful. The full report, with pictures, will be in the next issue of the LHSA "Viewfinder" and there will also be the information on the black paint LHSA Special Edition M6TTL. All the best, Tom A