Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/08/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hey Larry-- How about a photo of what it looks like in place? Thanks Ric Carter http://gallery.leica-users.org/Passing-Fancies On Aug 23, 2006, at 12:01 PM, Lawrence Zeitlin wrote: > > On Aug 23, 2006, at 8:14 AM, Hoppy wrote: > >> DS M3 vintage body, functional, but the vulcanite's looking tatty > > > RECOVERING A LEICA > > Vulcanite is Leica's cruel joke on Leicaholics. It becomes brittle > with age and flakes off at the slightest excuse. Even Leica has > abandoned Vulcanite on new cameras, substituting a textured PVC > covering. > > I have recovered several user LTM cameras, an M3, and an Olympus > OM1 with 3M Safety Walk Nonskid Tape and have found it to be > significantly better in appearance and handling ease than the > original aged and battered Vulcanite. The nonskid tape is a > resilient textured rubberlike material sold in hardware stores for > $1.99/ft. in a 2" width. It comes in black, grey, and white colors > with an adhesive back. The 2" width is perfect for Leica bodies. I > wouldn't recover a valuable collector quality Leica but it is just > the thing for a hard working user camera. You can also play around > with people's minds. I covered a IIIc in grey and panic fellow > Leica fans when they think I am taking a Luftwaffe model on hiking > trips in the Appalachians. > > The process is quite simple. Remove the cracked Vulcanite from the > camera. That's the easy part. Next make a paper cutting pattern for > the nonskid material. Be very precise in marking the position and > outline of the lens mounting flange, the strap lugs, and the > baseplate lug cutout. Indicate the exact position of the two shell > mounting screws and the slow speed dial on the LTM models. The > paper pattern should wrap around the body shell and be joined just > below the center of the lens mounting flange. When you are > satisfied that the pattern is as good as you can get it, cut the > nonskid material to the same shape using a sharp Exacto knife. > Since the 2" tape edges are perfectly straight, I have found it > easiest to use one side for the upper edge of the covering, the > part that fits next to the top plate. Use a leather punch to cut > precise holes for the strap mounting lugs and the shell mounting > screws. > > When the covering is cut to shape remove the backing paper and > align it to the camera. The sticky adhesive permits some movement > as long as it isn't pressed hard to the underlying surface. When > you are satisfied that the nonskid material is correctly > positioned, press it into full adhesion. The adhesive sticks pretty > well immediately and sets quite strong within 24 hours. Check to > see that the baseplate fits correctly. Slight corrections can be > made with a sharp razor blade. If you've made an unfixable error, > rip it off and try again. The stuff costs only about $2 per camera. > > When you are done you will have a Leica that looks as good as new > (at least the covering) and handles a lot better. True to its name, > the nonskid material permits a firm grip on the camera and absorbs > and cushions slight impact better than the factory covering. If you > hate Vulcanite and don't want to spend $100 on a custom cover give > this a try. > > Larry Z > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information