Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/11/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The material that Fargo sells- their Fargo 4040 looks amazingly like the older Leica vulcanite- I had my 135 Elmar body recovered and I can't tell the difference! If you are really careful, I would imagine that you could cut and apply your own for a fraction of Leica's $175 or so! Dan - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Dante A Stella" <dante@umich.edu> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Friday, November 24, 2000 12:57 PM Subject: Re: Vulcanite: [Leica] Friday FS: Nickel + Dime > > My apprehension about Vulcanite would not exactly be allayed by switching for > another with it intact, since mine was intact when I got it. The basic problem > is that any rubber compound will dry out in 41 years, and thermal stress only > exacerbates the problem. I will give it one more whirl with a patch (it is a > small chip but disconcerting, since I'm sure more will come). I think > ultimately, forking over a hundred bucks to Leica's Canada repair facility will > be cheaper than therapy. > > It was a poor choice of material - but Leitz was not alone. Konica made their > Model I with Vulcanite and it is a chronic problem on that camera, too. > > Has anyone used a vinyl-patching compound (with the color matching, heat cure and > texturization)? I saw that today - the biggest challenge is getting the right > texture but it looks like the right idea. > > > > john wrote: > > > Dante A Stella wrote: > > > > > > Well, I think we're on the way to funding a recovering for my M3, whose > > > Vulkanite is not reacting well to the cold and dry weather. > > > > > My local repairman tells me the cheapest and easiest way to recover you m3 is > > to find another m3 basket case but with good vulconite and swap body shells. > > No messy removal and no problem with cracking the valconite fitting it to the > > camera. It is also the right vintage. My repairman and I suspect other repair > > persons have many boby shells from non repairable cameras. YOu might want to > > check it out > > > > John Shick > >