Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/11/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Well, I understand most of Mark Rabiners post...but this time I have to respectively disagree. Ben seems to want an R camera that is not dependent upon electronics.... that leaves the SLs and the R 6 and the R6.2. Personally my camera of choice is the R6....just because I have one. The RE and the R5 are both electronic cameras where if the battery or electronics go away...the options are limited for shooting photographs... Personally I am very cool with the R6 - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Rabiner" <mark@rabinergroup.com> To: <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2003 17:16 Subject: Re: [Leica] Time to Replace that R4S . . . | BenMarks@aol.com wrote: | > | > Well, the ol' R4S has been diagnosed with a bad mirror case escapement -- supposedly the linkage between the R4s's meter and the chip which controls the shutter speed on auto-exposure. And wouldn'cha know the cost to repair is greater than the cost to replace (check out the astoundingly low prices on the R4s at KEH.com, for example). | > | > So this begs the question: What to replace this camera with? I am looking for R-family recommendations (please no discussion of digi-this-or-that). Any recommendations or regrets amoung those shooting with R5, 6, 6.2, 7 or RE? Any dogs in this group? I have to say, I use my R-series camera when I want the exposure-automation features and have LOVED the results. Lenses are 35-50-135. Incidentally, I think that R8 and 9 are too spendy for me, even used, given the amount of use this camera gets compared to my Ms. | > | > I'm thinking that I won't replace with another R4-era camera unless someone has a recommendation as to how to avoid electronics problems. All of my "sudden death" camera problems with Leicas (as opposed to idiot-photographer dropping one for ex.) have been electronics problems. Dead meter - M6 after 10 years (second user), dying meter on R4s after 8 years (second user) and "manual" - ISO setting malfunction on my new M7 (still figuring out when I can part with it for repairs as the DX-reading function seems to work fine). | > | > So, R-users, what's working for you and why? | > | > Thanks in advance, | > | > Ben Marks | > benmarks-at-AOL.com | > -- | I beg to disagree. And would politely call this BS. | Buying and selling diatribe number 87 Q. | Please delete post if you've read these before from me. | Every 4 months. You know the drill. | | If the price to replace an R4s is so astounding low then why look for | another type of body? | Has it be established that this "bad mirror case escapement..." is a | major ongoing flaw of the whole camera production justifying this very | low market price? Because it sounds to me like a great deal would the R | people please inform us?! | As it is it's not clear why at this point to go looking for another type | of body. | | And It's tricky call shopping for a camera he plans to seldom use. | Naturally he plans to not spend too much for it as he says. | But something goes out on this body type and it's no longer a good investment? | That's a question R users and experts will answer. | | How much was the camera appreciated by its user before it broke? Did it | effortlessly take good pictures or not? | | Recently I had a CLA done for my Hasselblad ELM which cost a couple | hundred bucks. As there were some problems. Might have been awhile. This | is what a new used one would cost. I told him to go ahead without | blinking an eyeball. I know similar things have occurred with my Nikon | bodies which I'd used for a few decades and am now using again because | of digital. Sometimes they cost a lot of money to get fixed. | | And I know that quite a few of my bodies have had their accumulative | Cla's and so on's. shutter replacements or what not cost on the long run | more than i paid for the camera. Or more than it would cost to get | another one. | To me this means I am maintaining the camera not that I have an | delightful excuse to go shopping. | | I recommend having the camera fixed. | And maintaining it until it proves itself a major lopsided drain on the | users finances. As in multiple incoming large maintenance bills close | together that don't seem to have an end. | This is not what I'm seeing here. I'm seeing it broke once. | | What was his state of mind with the camera before it broke I ask again? | Was it boring him? Was it thrilling him? Somewhere in between? | I find it strange that was omitted. | I only ask because I imagine using a camera which somewone were really | getting in tune with would be a major disappointment when it turned out | to be a major maintenance problem. | That would be a disappointment. | I don't see that here. Or the opposite. | | I look forward to when one of my main cameras break. and gets it over with. | It's a much smoother ride generally after that. | But sometimes cameras need work. | And sometimes they need a lot of work. | And sometimes they need fairly regular work. Like medium format systems | with backs. | | I don't sell my cameras out! | And they repay me by taking a real nice picture for me every once in a while. | | I try not to flit from camera to camera but get to know the inner | nuances of the bodies I use. To me to use a camera I should not have to | think. ... as in where a button might be. My hands should be moving | around without the need of my brain. | | The thrill of a new camera is nice in a way, don't get me wrong. But the | thrill of a new important photograph "for me" to add to my body of work | to print over and over again in different sizes and papers and | developers for shows and portfolios does not compare and would rarely | come from the use of a brand new camera body. | Come over to my house I'll show you some photographs. If we have time | afterwards I'll show you some cameras. I think that ones "photography" | efforts become much more enjoying if one takes a similar approach. | Cameras are a means to an end. Decide what you like. Photography or cameras. | | By the way the majority of the dozen or so camera bodies I use have hit | the floor or asphalt or gravel one time or another. I'll admit it when | most people won't. I pick them up and keep shooting. And I expect them | to work. Not that i don't break out into a cold sweat. | If that happens to my D100 then I don't know! | | I had a Hasselblad CM fly out of my hand and go skimming a half block | down a side gravel street in Cannon Beach. It bounced at least 4 times! | It's first hit was on the lens hood of the 80 CF Which semi collapsed as | I think intended by the clever Swedes. I picked it up and finished the | roll. I brought in for a CLA when I got home and he said it didn't need | one! I use it all the time. I bought it for 500 bucks 12 years ago! | I'll admit to luck on that one. | | My advice is to buy a camera and MARRY IT. Use it up. Drop it. Pick it | up. Fix it. Count it's use to you in Decades! Buy bricks of film for it. | Shoot them. Take the emphasis off buying and selling different cameras | and on to the act of photography itself. This buying and selling stuff | is boring. | If this was the Leica buyers and sellers group I think i would have less | of a point here. | But this is the Leica USERS group. | And although this would obviously take the emphasis away from collecting. | I hope harder it would take the emphasis off of TRADING. | Collecting is a thing unto itself i actually have respect for. | The constant TRADING of one camera for another under the title of some | practice of photography really gets my goat. | | | Mark Rabiner | | Portland, Oregon USA | http://www.rabinergroup.com | -- | To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html