Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/05/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> There is a lot of similarity and expertise that has been > gleaned over the decades. Leica didn't make film or copiers. Just optics, > cameras, and paraphernalia that supports this line. Hi Jim I am sorry if I misread your remarks about the Hexar RF and the thin ice people using them face as a criticism of Konica's ability to make cameras. As for fields of competence, for most of the history of Leitz and Leica in its various current entities the cameras have been only a small fraction of the lines produced: microscopes, binoculars, surveying equipment and somewhere after these came the cameras. Konica started as a photographic company and diversified. Hasselblad started as a textile company and diversified. Not sure about Linhof but I recall cameras were a sideline there too. Oskar is of course one of our demigods and we all know and love the heritage of his camera creation - or we would not be here chatting about it. I am not a devotee of the corporate history of Konica but I do know that they have been innovative in a number of areas Leica has been, for reasons of size and style, slow and/or deficient: AE, AF, built-in motors and generally reliable electronics. I feel that the Hexar RF is a product that complements the Leica M range very nicely and from my own experience and that of the majority of people whom I have heard from using this camera there have been no problems using Leica lenses on them. I know when the focus is out of whack and I have had a couple of Ms (M3 and M6) with back focus problems which have, in the case of one M6, needed to be re-collimated half a dozen times. > And I believe that there is a basic incompatibility between Leica lenses > and Konica Hexar bodies. Is this belief based on actual experience? Let's see what Howard Cummer discovers in his survey of actual users. I see that Erwin too has reservations about the tolerances and specs Konica are working with but the results I and others are getting would suggest that they are not as big an issue as some might like to think they are. Perhaps we are all just lucky. I also take the reputed tolerances of Leica production with a pinch of salt, based upon my own experiences which I shan't enlarge upon right now suffice to say any company that manages to put the bayonet on a lens such as the Noctilux upside down and then tout its QC as a main selling point has its work cut out... I suspect Konica is cagey about the Leica involvement because of legal issues: they cannot be seen as condoning nor recommending the use of Leica lenses since they have not got any form of licensing with them. This is the same as any other camera company which will specifically disclaim warranty liability if their cameras are used with third party lenses, flashes etc. There is also the issue of face: if, as the rumours suggest, the RF was an aborted coproduction with Leica then Konica probably do not want to raise the issue in any public forum to avoid embarrassing questions. Rgds Adrian - -- Adrian Bradshaw Corporate and Editorial Photography Beijing, China Tel/Fax +86 10 65325112 mobile: +86 139 108 222 92 e-mail: adrianpeterbradshaw@compuserve.com OR apbbeijing@yahoo.com website: http://www.apbphoto.com http://www.liaisonintl.com/bradshaw.htm http://www.liaisonintl.com/bradshaw_e.htm _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com