Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]DonjR43198@aol.com wrote: > > If Leica knows about the problems as your post suggests, why hasn't Leica > issued a recall notice and offered to resolve and repair the problem M-6 > pressure plate problem? Have you taken that question to Leica? If you have, > it would be helpful to all if the Leica response were posted. I have bought 3 M6s, none of which have had problems of any kind. I have taken thousands of pictures with these cameras, none of which have been scratched by a pressure plate. The quality of these photographs has been erratic, but I have always attributed this to the marginal skills of the photographer. Three cameras do not make a scientifically representative sample from which to draw reliability conclusions. Likewise, anecdotal reports of pressure plate scratching do not indicate a widespread, chronic problem with quality control. You need better data to draw this conclusion. > I do not believe it is being hypercritical to suggest the M-6 camera pressure > plates should not scratch the film. That is just plain old basic stuff. Of course, under no circumstances should a pressure plate ever scratch film. There is no excuse for this malfunction and if it is due to a manufacturing defect, Leica should admit it, apologize, issue a recall and fix the problem immediately. What I object to is summary judgment resulting from the assumption of guilt. Reasonable people need good data to conclude that a widespread, chronic problem exists. Survey away, but it is premature, at this point, to reach this conclusion. And having received perhaps 90,000+ Lug messages over the last three years, why is this only the first time we have addressed the scratching pressure plate epidemic? David W. Almy Annapolis