Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/01/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Apart from the gruesome story that your wrote down below, and from the fact that I would do exactly as Ted suggested, I remember that my Digilux 2 did get hot on the top right side (as seen from the back). I don't remember the sound you mention, though. I suppose 100 degrees is in F? Working with mine felt like about 122? F after having it on for about half an hour. I never asked myself something about it (believing something like: sometimes battery operated tools heat up), and sold it after 2 years only because I wanted more megapixels. But it indeed is very disgraceful of Leica USA not to answer your perfectly legitimate question properly. Good luck, Philippe Op 5-jan-07, om 19:04 heeft joeaksa@attglobal.net het volgende geschreven: > Esteemed group, > > I have lurked on the LUG for several years now, posting from time > to time but rarely. > > I have used Leica camera's since I was 5 years old (have proof!) > having started > shooting with my Father's M2 way back in the late 1950's. I now > have one of most > every model Leica made (and a few duplicates) until the M6 era and > use them from > time to time. Saying this just to give the list some history, I am > not new to using a > Leica and have owned and used them for over 45 years. > > Almost two years ago I was browsing the LUG email list on a Friday > and saw a list > member selling a Digilux 2. We chatted a bit and after 10 days or > so had a like new > camera in my hands. Fell in love immediately and still feel the > same way about the > camera. > > I travel for a living and took it out with me last spring. We were > in a shuttle in London > and the driver forgot to latch the rear door. My camera bag, along > with others, went > rolling out the rear door when he took off. We stopped and put > everything back in the > car and continued to the airport. The drivers company agreed to > make everything > right and they have paid the repair bill for the camera and bag. > > Upon arriving home found that the on/off switch on the Digilux 2 > was stiffer than > normal so I sent it into Leica USA. Asked them to please email me > when they had an > estimate as I travel for a living. > > Over a month went by and no email. I returned home from being in > Hong Kong and > Singapore for two months to find a letter from Leica. Then found > another one telling > me to please respond or they would return the camera. Noted right > on the first repair > invoice were the notes "please email estimate to xxxx" but for some > reason they did > not send me an email. > > I then called Leica and gave them a credit card number for the > repair. Again asked > them to please email me when it was shipped out as I did not want > the camera to be > left sitting at my doorstep as UPS does at times, especially if I > was out of town again. > Not a problem I was told. A month or so went by and no email. I > head out of town > again and guess what? The camera was shipped to my house with no > notification > what so ever. Luckily a friend was there to pick up the notice > before the camera was > returned to the sender and call UPS. > > Opening up the package I found the on/off switch to work perfectly. > I then charged > the battery and inserted it and a memory card into the camera and > turned it on. > Worked great and I proceeded to take a pic or two to try it out. > > While holding it up to my face I noticed a popping inside the back > of the camera, > about an inch below the on/off switch. You could hear and feel it, > and it reminded me > of a flash unit recharging. Never seen nor had that happen before > inside any camera. > Sounded like a capacitor charging, then discharging, over and over > again. After a > minute or so the back of the camera on the right lower side started > to get warm so I > removed the battery and memory chip and it stopped. > > Hmmm, could be a bad battery so I charged my extra battery (both > genuine Leica > batteries, no clones here) and inserted it in the camera. Nothing > out of the ordinary at > first so I turned the camera on again and waited. After a minute or > so the popping > started again. Again the back of the camera started to get warm. > Something was not > right with the camera and I was not going to have it burn up like > the laptops we have > seen on the nightly news so I turned it off and removed the battery. > > Sent the camera back to Leica in New Jersey with a description of > the problem. No > word for weeks. Finally I call. The gent I need to talk to is too > busy to talk to anyone > right now. Left my number. Two days later he calls and says that > there is nothing > wrong with my camera. I ask him about the popping noise and heat in > the back of the > case. He says that there is no problem with the camera. I tell him > to put a battery in > the camera, turn it on and let it sit for a few minutes. He says > that they will do this > and get back to me in a day or so. I have not heard back from him > since, and its > been over 3 months. > > Finally I call Leica again and talk to someone, but not the boss. > They say that they > will get to the bottom of this and get back to me. Someone calls > and tells me that > they are working on the camera and that they will get back to me. > Finally after the > camera had been at their facility for weeks I receive an email from > someone telling > me that it was being shipped back. I asked about the problem and > they say that > "there was nothing wrong with the camera." > > Guess what? I return home around Christmas after being overseas for > two months > again and after charging the battery once again insert it into the > camera. Same > damm thing with both batteries. I have shown this to two separate > photographers and > both say that they would not trust the camera and that eventually > something is going > to burn up inside. Also a friend has a IR digital therometer. We > let the camera stay > on for a minute and recorded the temps. Top part of camera was > about 74 degrees, > while the area below the switch was 80, then 90, finally up to 100 > degrees before > switching it off. Clearly something is getting hot in this area and > its not good. > > Am really at wits end on this. I have used Leica camera's all my > life and they are the > best that they are, however my experience with Leica USA has really > soured me at > this time. For many years I lived in Germany and used the Leica > Factory repair > service and they were excellent. I had hoped for the same excellent > service and > assistance from Leica USA but between their lack of communication > and poor > service I am starting to feel that its time to send anything > needing repair to Germany. > If the camera had "no problem" then why was it kept at the repair > facility for over a > month? Why no communication? I am paying for this, its not a free > service, yet they > act like they are doing me a service to take my money and then > return a non-useable > camera. At least the camera worked before I sent it in, just with a > sticky on/off switch. > Now I cannot even use it. > > Has anyone ever had anything like this happen with their Digilux 2? > Any suggestions > as to what to do here? I cannot use the camera as it is. Does > anyone feel that this > could be two separate batteries defective and causing this? > > Really would appreciate some suggestions here. > > Thanks in advance, > > Joe Abrahamson > Phoenix Arizona > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >