Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/07/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 7/11/99 10:57:14 AM Eastern Daylight Time, bcaldwell@softcom.net writes: << The only way you can tell if you'd like the HM .85 M6 with a 35mm lens is to try one. If, like me, you wear eyeglasses, you probably won't. If you think that there might be a 28mm lens in your future, you'll have to use an auxilliary finder (fairly expensive) with the HM. On the other hand, the standard M6 has the 28mm brightlines and lets glasses wearers see the 35mm brightlines fairly easily. Even though I have two standard M6s, I still use the auxilliary finder for my 28mm lens. >> This is exactly the same in my case. To further it, because I use the M6 mostly for scenic/travel photography, the fact that the framelines (in all M's) are set to show area covered at the lens' closest focusing distance has always presented another problem. Various books and even the owner's manual makes reference to the fact that you get "a little" more on film than you see in the finder, but it's a *lot* more, in particular when you're shooting slides, using maximum DOF and composing to the edges. People who mostly use the Leica for people photography with out-of-focus backgrounds, or who have the luxury to do some cropping in printing, would probably care less about all this. But for those who shoot scenics, check out the M6 framelines against your SLR and you'll see exactly what I mean. It is most pronounced with the 50 and 90 frames (as you'd expect, since longer lenses show a greater change in effective focal length as they're focused) but oddly not much at 135 (I suspect those frames are actually not optimized for near-focus, as I can't find any other plausible explanation). If you make a comparison, using landmarks on the horizon, between the Leica's 50 and 90 frames and an SLR with 50 and 90 lenses you will be *astounded* at the discrepancy. With the M2 and M4 I always used the add-on finders for 90 and 135, and continued this practice with the M6, until I discovered that at distances over about 10 feet, the 75 frame almost exactly matches what a 90mm lens covers (a bit of a pain holding the preview lever but cheaper than changing the lensmount!); the 50 frame shows the 75's coverage; the 135 lens, just framing to the *outside* of the framelines is ok; and if you look through the finder from about 1" away (like people who wear glasses always do anyway) the area within the black eyepiece rectangle's periphery is a close approximation of the 50mm lens at longer distances (roughly, as one book states, about 3 additional thicknesses of the 50 framelines all around). This last one works less well with the HM finder, due to less area between the 50 framelines and the eyepiece border. If I were to use an HM for my kind of photography I'd want a 50 add-on finder as well. Again, this is really only relevant to people intending to use the Leica for carefully-composed slides at distances from about 10 ft on. DT