Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/01/25

[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]

Subject: Re: [Leica] Chance from R to Nikon?
From: Joe Berenbaum <joe-b@dircon.co.uk>
Date: Sun, 25 Jan 1998 20:18:56

At 00:59 25/01/98 -0800, you wrote:
<snip>
>Then to satisfy my urges for autofocus/exposure, I bought a Canon EOS-1n
>about>two years ago (the F4 seemed too big and slow).  Great camera,
>excellent>ergonomics, sharp lenses (but lots of light fall off wide open),
>focusing in>the same direction as Leica, decent flash system.   Probably
>should have kept>it, but sold it.  Why?  Sentimentality (I'm a Nikon and
>Leica guy) and>everything on that Canon system felt lightweight and made
of >plastic.  Not that>there's anything wrong with that (as Jerry Seinfeld
would >say).  The EOS-1n>took great pictures -- I just didn't enjoy using
it.  I >know I may feel the>same way about the F5 and Nikon lenses after a
few >months use.  We'll see.  But>sometimes we have to learn the hard way.
>Still love the Leica equipment very much.  But try taking a photo of my 15
>month old son with an all-manual R6.  When I tell him "Move slower John
>Clark!"> he just won't listen :)
>John McLeod

I have had an af system alongside Leica kit for when I need it, first
Nikon, then EOS, then Nikon again. I really liked the Canon lenses and the
1n and RT bodies I had but somehow I didn't feel right with the system.
There was too much dependence on electronics for my taste and I felt that
at least with Nikon I could minimise that and all the Nikon lenses could
still be fully usable on a completely mechanical body, so they would not
become obsolete. The thing that bothered me about the EOS lenses was that
they depended for their continued functioning on the viability of the
electronics that they had inside, and at some point an electronic problem,
if not repairable, could render an EOS lens unusable even if there was
nothing mechanically wrong with it. Although I like the usability of
electronic cameras I also like the idea that most of my stuff will work
without batteries if need be, so I suppose I'm a Nikon guy rather than an
EOS guy at heart. Also, and this is quite interesting- (to me anyway)- even
when I had the EOS system I couldn't let go of two favourite mf Nikon
lenses- the 105/2.5 and the 70-150 E zoom, which lived in a drawer, until
in the end I just had to get a body to use them on again. Actually I don't
like the "look" of some Nikon lenses that much- to me it seems punchy but
flat, and the out-of-focus areas with the three 50mm Nikkors I've used
looks totally awful and has ruined several pictures. But the way I get
round this is I don't use 50mm Nikkors. With the other focal lengths it
doesn't seem nearly so bad, and I can get usable images. I think my 50/3.5
Micro-Nikkor (that I foolishly gave to my daughter) was ok, and I might try
the 50/1.2 sometime to see what its like. But the 50 1.4-1.8 Nikkors I
cannot use.

Joe Berenbaum