Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/07/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This is clearly a Leica Cassette. Canon later "borrowed" the design and produced this for use in their cameras up to their R series SLR's and later RF's; production ended around 1980. Leitz supplied these cassettes (for a price, of course!) until their demise in 1986. The LTM cassette is just a Charley Hotel too long to work in an M camera, while the M cassette will work in both, so these are the more desireable of the two. Their is a vastly superior design of a somewhat similar cassette for use on Zeiss Ikon cameras. This was marketed until the demise of camera production by Zeiss Ikon in 1971. And, as was the case with the Leitz cassette, another firm borrowed the design though, in this case, it was Nippon Kogaku, who continued to produce a Nikon cassette into the early 1990's. The Zeiss Ikon cassette is vastly easier to use but, in the end, both are substantially better than commercial film cassettes, as they allow no-contact exposure of the film. That is, the film does not pass through a felt light-trap, as it does in the normal Agfa-designed cassette but, rather, passes through an open gate on the cassette, a gate opened by the operation of a lug fitment on the baseplate of the camera. Zeiss Ikon went farther than Leica and allowed double-cassette usage -- that is, you could use a Zeiss Ikon cassette for both the film and take-up spool, allowing you to switch films in mid-stream by opening the back and replacing it with another emulsion, albeit you would lose the three or four exposures exposed by this. (Opening the back turns the lugs which would close the cassettes, so the film stored in each was light-tight.) I have a lot of both kinds of cassettes and love them -- and Watson bulk-loaders can handle both of them. But most commercial processors have never seen the like and, thus, you are, in the end, reduced to using them only for emulsions that you are willing to process yourself. These cassettes are pretty bullet-proof but I did have a Leitz cassette destroyed by a local lab. I tried to warn the clerk but she assured me that the processor knew what she was doing. I tried to give instructions but ... it did not take, and I received back a developed roll of film and a cassette with a sprung spring.. (The result was that about a year later I received a slew of Leitz red plastic camera stands, the sort of thing used by camera stores to show their wares, dating from the middle 1960's, and these are MOST highly appreciated, as there will never be a run of these available and, who knows, I might even have use of them at a camera show to display some LTM camera or the like. And the clerk, the then-manager of the store, and the processor herself are still clients of mine, so, sometimes, holding your peace is a wise idea.) In 1995, my late wife and I went to the Beach with our kids. I took dozens of rolls of film, and all of it in Leitz cassettes. We got home late Sunday evening and I developed every Schwarz/Weiss and C-41 roll myself by the following Wednesday and had every strip reviewed and prints made within a week. The Kodacrhome rolls I shot (two? three?) were sent off and received back a week later; these had been reviewed and Cibachrome/Ilfochrome prints made by me within a week after their return and within three weeks of our return from the beach. God, but I wish I had that energy today! Marc msmall@infionline.net FAX: +540/343-7315 Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!