Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/06/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>>>>>> Date: Tue, 06 Jun 2000 05:33:10 -0700 From: Ted Grant <tedgrant@home.com> Subject: Re: [Leica] R heat problems Message-ID: <393CEE0B.AEF7F8@home.com> References: <3.0.32.20000606082257.006c509c@box4.tin.it> Robert Appleby and Sue Darlow wrote: > My R6 melted at around 50° one time. So did I, nearly.<<<<<< Hi Rob, Yeah I'd think that was a reasonable temp to melt! ;-) Wheweeeeee! Man I sure hope you a cold beer handy after. And if the R6 were black body I wouldn't want to pick it up. How was the film? Although I imagine OK unless you were cooking at 50 for very long. ted <<<<<<<<<< That was a hot day. But, the year before, there was an international one-day cricket match at Gwalior with a temperature of over 50° on the pitch. One day matches are very fast! They really earned their money that day. I was in Jhansi at the time, just nearby, and I recall riding a moped in sandals - my feet burned up. I had to keep stopping the moped to let my feet cool off, the air was like a hairdryer at full power. Unbelievable heat. We used to drink several litres of water a day and never do peepee. Funnily enough I've never had - or noticed, more like - problems with the film (E100SW) in India. I usually buy a couple of hundred rolls for a 6 week trip and have never noticed any kind of colour shift. Sometimes it goes for three months or more before processing. Maybe they make it slightly less critical for the tropical market? More like a consumer version? On the other hand I've never tested this kind of thing. After all, outside of product photography it isn't really a major problem. Rob. Robert Appleby and Sue Darlow Via Bellentani 36 41100 Modena Italy Tel/fax [39] 059 303436