Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Concerning the reliability mechanical vs. electronic, it is difficult to compare peaches with bananas. Mechanical stuff was more repairable in the past but is getting less today, and electronics are mostly replaced as everything is soldered together on circuit boards. I would say the difference is between old/new stuff, not mech./electronic. Most products made before the nineties did not have predetermined breaking points like today. I have for instance a Sanyo stereo tape recorder from the the early 80ies that survived 15 years in humid rock'n'roll rehearsal cellars, and now even my kids can't kill it, still works. Otoh, one of the digi Ixus I throwed away after 1 year of use had a stuck lens-cover mechanism, the only visible mechanical part of that camera. To come back on topic, my M6 has the second shutter and a the second finder (MP upgrade) and works well. I agree with Frank concerning the reasons of buying new gear. I guess all of us LUGgers (except the pros) could live well with one camera only and every additional camera purchase is purely gear-lust driven. Didier >Many people change cameras and computers frequently but this is >rarely because of reliability - though certainly some products are >designed not to last long - it is because they want something new. My >point is that saying mechanical items are more reliable than >electronic is not supported by facts. Mechanical items may usually be >easier for an artisan to repair but they are not inherently more >reliable - quite the opposite. >Frank