Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/04/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>It never ceases to amaze me how often there's talk about a new Leica M. Why is this? Are you all dissatisfied with the currect M6? Sure, the M6 is an obsolete camera, but does this automatically mean there's is to be a successor to this hugely succesfull camera?<< It never ceases to amaze me that people claim the M6 is an obsolete camera. It is not obsolete if you consider its function and attributes. It is a mechanical camera that is not battery dependent, therefore it will work when other cameras won't due to simple failure of an electical circuit or the lack of batteries. When viewed for what it is, a mechanical camera, what makes it obsolete? Is there another rangefinder camera currently being produced that will function with or without batteries? The Contax G and Konica Hexar are delightful cameras, but without batteries they are no more than a dead weight. Same goes for any battery dependent SLR. Certainly there are a rash of auto-everything SLR cameras on the market today but there is still room for a finely made mechanical SLR. If that were not true Nikon and Contax would not be selling them. Obsolete might be appropriate if there was a better design mechanical rangefinder camera out there that does what the Leica M camera will do. In my opinion there isn't. Part of my criteria for choosing an M camera was that very attribute. I can still photograph when batteries are either dead or simply not available. Granted there are more sophisticated camera designs out, and certainly they meet the needs of many photographers, but when your criteria is non-electric dependent rangefinder, the M is the best unit going. I am all for Leica making an M7 (as envisioned by speculation, an electrical camera) but not at the expense of discontinuing the classic M6 because for me the M6 is anything but obsolete. My 2 centavos Don