Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/04/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 10:56 PM 4/25/00 -0400, Doug Nygren wrote: >Someone asked how Hasselblad can have tight quality control and Leica >can't. My experience does not support this assertion. I prefer Leica to >Hasselblad and I prefer Rollei to Hasselblad. Leica and Rollei cameras >are easier to use, and I prefer the quality of the lenses I have with my >Leica and Rollei to those I've tried with the Hasselbald. Being Swedish, >I regret I have to say this. > >doug nygren Well... as a Hasselblad user since 1961, my experience with Hasselblad is exemplary. Starting in 1961, I started using Hasselblad in my commercial photography business. Two 500C bodies, 50, 80, 120, 150, 250 lenses, backs, bellows, tubes, etc. In fifteen years of hard use, I had not a single failure or lockup. I currently have a 503CW and a 203FE, 40CFE, 50CFI, 60CF, 80CFE, 100CFi, 150CFi, 180CFi lenses, A backs, E backs, etc... My daughter is the recipient of the 503, 50, 80, 150, and A backs, she uses it in photo school, I use the rest. We trade lenses occasionally depending upon who needs what. She has a Leica R7 and several lenses but needed MF for school. I gave her 30 minutes of instruction on the use of the Hasselblad system. She never looked back. It was a natural fit. I have never had a piece of Hasselblad equipment fail. I've never had a piece of Leica equipment fail. Just the vertical RF alignment on my M6's. Even though the adjustment is lacquered in place by the factory, the alignment still seems to go out occasionally. The single thing that causes most Hasselblad problems is that people put the dark slide in their pocket, then sit on them, which usually bends them. Using a bent dark slide will damage the foam light trap. Light traps are, however, very cheap and very easy to install. New Hasselblad backs have built-in dark slide storage. Lindahl makes a dark slide storage add-on for older backs. Problem solved. Jim PS... <much OT> Hasselblad has great incentive programs. When I bought the 503CW, they were offering a free back with each new lens and "free" financing for 12 months. I bought a 503, four lenses and got four film backs free. That's $3200+ in backs. The cost of the system is spread over 12 equal payments. When my daughter needed a MF system for school, Hasselblad was offering $1500 rebate on the 203 & 205 cameras and again, free 12 month financing. So I got the 203 for myself since I'll never see the 503 again... which is the way I planned it anyway. What I paid to go through Brooks Institute of Photography would have bought a dozen Hasselblad systems. It is a great school, but expensive. My daughter is going to a Junior College (DeAnza) for two years, followed by a California state college (San Jose State) for two years majoring in Music and photography. Her photography instructor is a Brooks graduate and seems to be teaching the same curriculum only less intense. The main difference is that Brooks was (when I went through 1960/61) "total immersion" for two years. You ate, drank, and slept photography. There were a lot of dropouts. What I'm paying for her education is minuscule compared with the cost of Brooks, and Brooks doesn't teach music. Juilliard plus Brooks would have landed me in debtors prison forever! So the price of a Hasselblad 503CW system is cheap when looking at the big picture. The rewards are already coming in. From her first MF class portfolio (she chose trees) of seven Ilford 11x14 FB Warmtone mounted on 16x20 mount boards (Tri-X @ 200 in XTOL, Neutol +) she sold two of them (one time publication rights) to a Silicon Valley company for the cover of promotional material, including a credit line. Not bad for being genuinely involved in photography for only one year. Leica should have creative purchase plans. I talked to the Hasselblad rep and he told me that they got a H-U-G-E amount of new business because of the "free" 12 month financing. It was supposed to be over September of 1999. It was extended and is still going on. A sure sign of success. I could babble on for much much more but I'll stop the boredom now. Thanks, Jim again