Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This is a response to both Mr. Puts and some of the other posters. I think that Mr. Puts' basic orientation is correct. Collectors and collector-users are an interesting market segment, but a small one. Leica must serve photographers primarily (though if they can put blue leather on something and sell it for $10000, more power to them; it's R&D money). So I do agree that the LHSA members are not a good main reference group when Leica chooses what products to manufacture--too locked in the past. I got the Viewfinder for a while, but after a time articles on the various types of Imarects got old--since I found my primary interest is photography not collecting or user-collecting. As for the proper uses of the M, it's important to remember that Leica used to think of the M as a complete system camera--but of course SLR's hadn't come on the scene. Hence they produced kludges like the various closeup attachments and the Viso--efforts to broaden the use of the system by overcoming inherent problems in rangefinder design. These things work, but not nearly as well as an SLR, and that's why they aren't made any more. A parallel--Mamiya's efforts to sell closeup attachments for the Mamiya 6 and 7; they work too, but sales are small. So today the M does occupy a very restricted market segment. SLR's do long lenses, macro work, and extreme wide angles better--it's irrational to think otherwise. (Indeed, for example, although it's a very good lens, even the 135 f4 is, objectively speaking, hard to use on an M--as several of us have said, you can't see much of what you are photographing.) The M is a competitor with the following virtues (in addition to optical excellence): small size, quiet, quick accurate focusing in low light, and excellent with shorter lenses. These things do, as Mr. Puts says, make them better for quick shooting with people than SLR's, especially the current crop of huge, loud autofocusers. This is how Leica itself describes the usefulness of the M's in their own marketing--they no longer promote it as a complete system camera, and they are right to do this. They are also excellent travel cameras if weight matters and the limited selection of lenses is not a problem (e.g., you don't want to do landscapes with a 300). But when Leica looks at the future of this camera, it must look at what it actually can do well. In my opinion, Leica has unnecessarily restricted its market still further by refusing to update the M. There is no excuse today for refusing to build an autoexposure camera, and aperture-preferred could be done without changing the lenses at all. There is no excuse for not having a modern metering system, with a choice of at least spot and averaging metering and an exposure hold capability. There is no excuse for not redoing the viewfinder so that people with glasses don't have to buy auxiliary viewfinders for the 28 and in some cases the 35, and so that we don't have to put up with distracting multiple framelines. Indeed, there's no excuse for not solving the problem of small framelines with moderate telephotos. There's no excuse for continuing the difficult, slow and error-prone film loading system (yes, I know, it can be dealt with, and I do, but anyone who's loaded a Leica R knows how much easier and quicker it is). All these changes would make the Leica M do what it does best, better. I can hear the flamers loading up, accusing me of arguing for a point-and-shoot M. Not at all. All of the changes mentioned in the previous paragraph have nothing to do with point-and-shoots (some of them were implemented in the Minolta CLE, a camera some LUGers have been known to like). In fact, I think the Contax G's are designed in a way that makes them incompatible with the chief mission of 35 mm. rangefinders, because they have the delays imposed by P&S autofocus and noisy, obtrusive winding and rewinding. Their problems come from being too much like point-and-shoots. (The Contax is, however, a good travel camera, has lenses competitive with Leica's best, and costs a whole lot less.) I'm not saying that people cannot use M's whatever way they want. Baby pictures are fine! I'm also not saying that there's anything wrong with enjoying M's as beautifully made fine machines that are a pleasure to use--I certainly do. I'm just agreeing with Mr. Puts that for the M to survive, it must sell primarily to photographers, and that their interests have to come at the top of Leica's list. An implication of that is that photographers will be interested in the M only when it can do something better than other cameras--hence Leica's current narrowing of market focus for it. Charlie Charles E. Love, Jr. CEL14@CORNELL.EDU