Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/02/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]We spent huge quantities of electrons discussing this on the Leica Users' Group during the first decade of its existence. In the beginning was the word ... well, to be more precise, in the beginning was bulk film only, and the owner had to cut film and load his own cassettes: Leitz marketed a handy proprietary cassette, and Zeiss Ikon was shortly afterwards to introduce their own superior cassette design. Then came factory rolled preloaded film. (This was the time when "tailor-made" cigarettes were sold individually in Ma and Pa stores, by the way, to keep this in perspective: most cigarette smokers then rolled their own, as I used to do back in the Red Dog Saloon era when I did my own car work. I've mellowed, and Bull Durham is now spurlos versunkt and only commemorated in the name of a Minor League baseball team.) A preload was a roll of, generally, 36 exposures which you took into a darkroom and loaded into your Leitz or Zeiss cassette or the like. Then you shot the film and took it back into the darkroom, unloaded it and developed it. By the middle 1930's, film companies began to market film in cassettes based, I believe, on an AGFA design. From the day of the first preloads, there was no agreement on the length of the leader. Most companies adopted a 4" film leader but some held to a shorter 2". Leitz thread-mount cameras had a rather delicate constitution and clean loading really required the long leader: Leitz claimed that any work-around to avoid the use of a 4" leader might ran the risk of causing chips of film which might foul the advance mechanism. To be fair, both Steve Grimes and Tom Abrahamson have told me that they have never found any film-chip jams in the many LTM cameras they have overhauled or repaired, but both admitted that they often found small quantities of film chips in the innards of such cameras. Leitz went so far as to insert instructions for trimming the leader to have a 4" leader from the later IIIc's through the last IIIg's. These were visible when the baseplate was removed. Leitz went to some lengths to allow for the use of short-leader films in the M cameras (though, as Stan notes, this does not go for the M8!). (Leitz made the mistake of marketing a "Quick Load" kit for the M3 which generally did not work at all and when it did work, worked best with a 4" leader -- many Leica shooters came to refer to these as "quack load" kits for their pronounced unreliability. Leitz GENERALLY had good ideas but when they had bad ones, such as this kit or the Imarect auxiliary VF, they came up with doozies.) From the 1950's to the early 1970's, film manufacturers went to short leaders to cut down on production costs. Around 1975, Kodak and AGFA and Ilford made the switch. From that time, anyone using Leica LTM cameras other than bulk-loaders had to find a workaround to allow the loading of short-leader film into their IIIa or the like. This issue really is a non-starter but seems to present a significant problem for some folks. I just pull out my Swiss Army knife (a smaller Wenger when I am in a suit or a larger Victorinox when I am in my more customary shorts or blue jeans) and clip by sight and I've never had much of a problem, as it only takes a few seconds to do this. But some seem hampered in the doing of such a simple operation. These are the folks for whom Leitz marketed a film gate which allowed precision clipping of films: you pulled out the short leader film into this, dropped the gate over it, and then cut it precisely with a razor blade. Again, my Mark I Eyeball works just fine, but mileage DOES vary and others like these film gates. There were a number of quite useable Japanese clones which were marketed widely in the 1950's and later. The Leitz cassettes remained in production into the late 1980's, and my M6 Wetzlar takes them, though Solms M6's do not unless retrofitted with an earlier baseplate. The same design was marketed for twenty years or so after the end of the War by Canon for use in their own LTM cameras though these will also work in Leitz cameras. The Zeiss Ikon cassette lasted until the demise of Zeiss Ikon as a camera company in 1973; Nikon marketed a clone until 1990 or so. The Zeiss Ikon design was especially nice in that you could use one on both sides, and could clip the film if you wanted to process an especially valuable or "hot" string of frames, a matter of import to photo-journalists. Thus, if you came across, say, an auto accident, you could shoot ten shots or so, advance the film a couple of frames, open the camera and cut the film, preserving the rest of the roll, and have those ten shots developed for printing in the late editions of the newspaper and shades of Spiderman! Capa died with a Nikon RF and a Contax around his neck, both with such cassettes in them. The Soviets also produced clones of both the Leitz and Zeiss Ikon cassettes, though those for Leica cameras seem rare in the West and I have only seen photographs of them. The clone of the Zeiss Ikon cassette remained in production at least until 1986. "Pre-loaded" 35mm film disappeared during World War II in the West, but continued to be available in the Soviet Union up to the fall of Communism. I have a couple of such rolls of SMENA film though I have never opened them or used them. AGFA and ORWO and other European houses normally sold bulk film in 30 meter rolls (roughly, 98.4 feet), while Kodak and Ilford sold theirs in 100 foot rolls. AGFA up to the end sold its technical films in the US in 200 foot rolls. This is a complex matter but one fascinating to me. Marc msmall@aya.yale.edu Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!