Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/01

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Subject: [Leica] Intro
From: driggett at mac.com (Christopher Driggett)
Date: Sat Jan 1 18:15:58 2005
References: <000001c4f051$85b84600$6401a8c0@dorysrusp4> <04965E96-5C4F-11D9-BE6B-000D932F570E@mac.com> <6.1.0.6.2.20050101155107.05a70bc0@192.168.100.42> <03AF5D5F-5C53-11D9-BE6B-000D932F570E@mac.com> <07a801c4f06c$4cba0490$0200a8c0@robertbxucevjs> <BCBC7C80-5C60-11D9-BE6B-000D932F570E@mac.com> <05345B54-5C63-11D9-B1E0-00306599C552@earthlink.net>

Feli,
        Wow what an explanation! Thanks a lot.
Cheers,
Chris

On Jan 1, 2005, at 6:07 PM, Feli di Giorgio wrote:

>
> On Jan 1, 2005, at 5:50 PM, Christopher Driggett wrote:
>
>> I have dropped the D1 and D1h from walking heights onto concrete and 
>> pavement and they survived. I am less confident of the D70. But I 
>> have not held one so I will have to try it out(Not dropping one 
>> thought).  I am sorry to hear that  the M7 is not as robust. I 
>> thought that the Leica range finders where a very hardy breed. How 
>> then is their weather seals?
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Chris
>
> There are no weather seals, but then again there aren't a whole lot of 
> entry points either...
> But they seem to work in wet climates. PJ's used them all over Vietnam 
> and Tina dropped her M6 in a river, dried it out and kept on shooting. 
> Ted had a whole different experience involving bovine excretions, but 
> that's an extreme example...
>
> The M series is pretty tough and mechanically extremely reliable, but 
> there's not a lot of padding if you drop it on concrete from any sort 
> of height. Same goes for pretty much any other brass, mechanical 
> camera. Obviously the most sensitive part of the camera is the 
> rangefinder, which just like with any other camera of this type, can 
> be knocked out of alignment by a severe blow.
>
> But it depends. I had my M6TTL knocked out of my hand with a 90mm 
> attached. It flew about 9ft and landed on the concrete floor of a 
> movie theater. The result was a cracked body shell at the 12 o'clock 
> position over the lens mount, where it is at it's thinnest.
>
> On a different occasion I slipped on some wet metal plating and the 
> camera went flying down the stairs and onto a cobblestone floor. The 
> only damage were a few scrapes to the finish, but everything else was 
> ok. I was in worse shape than the camera.
>
> The oldest M cameras (M2/3) have their finder prisms blocks glued 
> together with Canadian balsam. Now 40 years old, the glue can become 
> brittle and a serious knock MAY cause
> them to separate, but that's a whole different story.
>
>
> feli
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________
> feli2@earthlink.net                    2 + 2 = 4                   
> www.elanphotos.com
>
>
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In reply to: Message from dorysrus at mindspring.com (Don Dory) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from driggett at mac.com (Christopher Driggett) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from richard-lists at imagecraft.com (Richard) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from driggett at mac.com (Christopher Driggett) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from robertmeier at usjet.net (Robert Meier) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from driggett at mac.com (Christopher Driggett) ([Leica] Intro)
Message from feli2 at earthlink.net (Feli di Giorgio) ([Leica] Intro)