Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Bill, Yes, I got your very good explanation. You know what's funny.... I don't look at headers real closely and thought that had been sent to the list too. I need to take better stock and when somebody sends a personal email to be sure and reply, with thanks. So, thank you! I looked at the price of a Hexar and it is almost as expensive as an M6. I'm really glad to see the popularity of rangefinder camera types surging. I am new to Leica but not to rangefinders.... My first serious camera at age 14 was a Kodak Retina Automatic III with Schneider Xenar 45/2.8. I still have it in fact, and it takes darn good pictures. And I am partial to the Voigtlander marque too.... I had a Bessa II with 105 Color Skopar and it took really good great big negatives... A fine tradition in cameras. I guess I like good glass. I have a Contax 645 in MF now, and love the pictures from it too. I know I will like my M6 and enjoy it to its fullest. John Bill Larsen wrote: > John Coan writes: > > |Anybody know the reasoning behind the Bessa cameras having the screw mount > |instead of the M mount like the Konica Hexar? You cannot mount any M lenses > on > |it like this (or can you?) > | > While I sent you a private post on why I think the Bessa cameras have a screw > mount instead of the M mount, I forgot to answer the second part of your > question regarding mount M lenses on the Bessa. > > The answer is no, you cannot mount a non-modified M lens on the Bessa. When > Leica changed from the screw mount bodies to the M mount bodies, they changed > the lens registration by one millimeter. This was to allow the use of all of > their previously screw mount lenses on the M cameras (as well as their > existing lens stock at the time) by use of an adapter that adds one millimeter > to the M camera registration. > > Regards, bill larsen