Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/06/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Sam wrote: >>> Well, I have had my M6 TTL .58 for coming up on four weeks now. <<<< Sam: As a new user, you may not be familiar with the evolution of M camera. Many of us older users will remember the M5. TTL metering became the rage in the late '60s to '70s. In 1972, Leica (then E. Leitz) dumped the M4 in favor of the M5 with TTL metering, a hot shoe and shutter speed information in the viewfinder. The M5 was and is a fine camera but the M5 is taller and significantly wider that the other M series cameras. The M5 was never accepted as a "real" Leica. It was a marketing disaster. Leica then returned to the M4-2 and M4-P without TTL metering before designing the M6 with its TTL meter. Changing the shutter of the M6 to accommodate a higher sync speed would require a change in the shape of the M camera - something that I do not expect Leica to do. To accommodate the meter, Leica sacrificed the self timer so that room could be found for the meter electronics inside body of the M6 to retain the shape of a true M series Leica. The shape of the body, the feel in one's hands, the single correct method of holding the camera, focusing tabs on most lenses and yes, the sound of the shutter are all part of the M camera that will likely remain constant. Doug Douglas F. Landrum Laguna Beach, California dflandrum@earthlink.net