Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/10/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dear Luggers, I have now been using my RD1 and various Leica lenses for two weeks and have formed some more impressions that I would like to share with you. For in the street shooting, nothing can beat the Tri Elmar. Its three focal lengths are matched with the three frame lines you can dial up on the RD1. The relatively slow speed of the Tri Elmar doesn?t matter so much; as the light goes down you just dial in a higher and higher ISO. Speaking of light, the auto white balance does not work so well in lower light levels and you need to set it manually if you are working at lower levels. For sun and shade, auto balance works quite well. Of course, in low light the Tri Elmar comes off and either the 35 Summilux Asph or the 50 Summilux goes on. Low light capability is really phenomenal when you combine these fast lens with ISO 1600 and despite the infinity focusing problem I mentioned in my first impressions ? I am not having a significant problem focusing close up and in low light with the fast lenses. Several people have contacted me off list with their stories of focusing problems and rangefinder misalignments but I don?t know if they are representative of a wide enough sample to form any conclusions yet whether Epson has a quality control problem at the factory with the rangefinder adjustment. I hope not. Epson hasn?t contacted me yet about my replacement camera ? it seems they can?t keep any inventory in stock in Hong Kong. The camera can be set for several different combinations of image types. The standard type settings are Edge Enhance, Saturation, Tint and Contrast all medium, noise reduction on low ? this is the default. After experimenting I find that I prefer Edge Enhance, Saturation, Contrast, and noise reduction on High and Tint on medium ? this gives more ?punch? to my photos. As Tom A. mentioned in his posting, the RD1 also has a mono setting and in B&W you can dial in clear, yellow, orange, green and red filters and take pictures and review the filter effects immediately. Given the smog most days in Hong Kong at this time of year, when I shoot scenics in B&W the red filter stays on all the time. The B&W photos look great on my computer screen and I think I am going to have to upgrade my Epson 1290 if I am going to get B&W prints that mirror (at least somewhat) the tonal quality on the screen. I took the RD1 to Macao in the middle of the week when my wife and I went over to celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary and there in street shooting I found myself using the Panasonic LC 1 more than the RD1, at least in the daylight hours. The LC 1 is very versatile with its 28 ? 90 zoom equivalent. What I would like to see in another generation of M mount digital cameras is an amalgam of the LC 1 and the RD 1. I would like to see a body with a screen that could show the image formed by a Leica M lens on the CCD before the picture is taken and I would like that screen to be rotating and tilting like the Canon G5 screen so that I could use the camera like a waist level view camera. Of course, the screen resolution would have to be high, in order to ensure accurate focusing with wide aperture Leica lenses ? but that is what I would like next please. Epson? Leica? Cheers Howard (in smoggy Hong Kong)