Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/01/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 12:30 AM 1/10/97 -0500, you wrote: >At 05:53 PM 1/9/97 -0800, Jim Brick wrote: > >>If you climb to the top of Everest, you take an M Leica. You don't take a >Contax G. > >The possible first ascent of Everest would have been documented by the Zeiss >lens on the camera taken along by Mallory and Irvine, a Kodak VP. And the >historical first ascent was documented by the Zeiss lens taken on the camera >carried by Sir Edmund Hillary, a Prewar Retina. Both lenses were, of >course, Tessars. > >In all fairness, if I were climbing Everest today (and this is NOT bloody >likely, I hasten to add!) I'd schlepp either a Rollei TLR or a Leica M6 along. > >Marc > >msmall@roanoke.infi.net FAX: +540/343-7315 >Cha robh bas fir gun ghras fir! > > > Correct Marc... the point is you take the tools YOU think (and hopefully know) will do the job for YOU. The lens formula is not as important as "will the system hold up for the intended use." Leica M has the reputation for being rugged enough and operable in extreme environments. And maybe the pre-war retina and maybe Galen Rowell's Nikon FM2 are reputable enough also. For them... not me. I think my Retina IIa had a bellows (long long time ago... can't remember) that I would not trust in extreme cold. The Contax G has NO reputation. If I don't know the company and don't know the equipment, I wouldn't use it in a critical un-repeatable situation. And before you ever set off, you make damn sure nothing is going to fall off or not fit. Use plenty of Loctite and Duct tape! Remember... what you get out of something is only as good as what you put in. The very thing you forget to double check is the very thing that will fail. People are very quick to blame someone or something else. Sometimes other people do stupid things that causes your failure. Usually it's the person in the mirror. I the back country of Colorado a few years ago, I had one of my two Leica R4's lock-up. I was shooting two different film types so really needed two cameras. I knew exactly what the problem was, the camera and the winder were out of sync. The ONLY way to fix it is to physically remove the winder from the camera, then replace it. Simple. Yes... but no. I use Really Right Stuff Arcs Swiss mounting plates on my equipment. The plate mounts over the screw that removes the winder. The plate is screwer into the winder tripod socket with a TORX head screw. Did I have a torx driver??? NO! Could I get the winder off of the camera body? NO! Did I have to make do with only one camera? YES! WILL I EVER EVER EVER DO THIS AGAIN...? NEVER! It was that guy in the mirror that caused the problem. And no, just removing the battery pack does not solve the lock-up. The winder must be physically disconnected from the baseplate. Jim