Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/12/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Mike Johntson wrote: >>> I think the Contax Aris is what the R8 should have been. Think of it. The original Barnack camera was a sub-miniature camera for its day. When the rangefinder was incorporated in the design, no one had ever made a rangefinder meachanism so small: but Oscar Barnack himself was adamant that the basic small size of the original camera not be appreciably violated. <<< Mike, 99% of the time I find myself in complete agreement with your opinions and your philosophy of What Photography Ought To Be. This is the other 1%. For some occasions the small, lightweight SLR is the one I prefer (for example, backcountry hikes, where I use the R4sP) but the bulk of my photographic work is with big lenses, hand-held. I'm apalled at the size of the modern SLR as defined by N and C, where feature upon marginally-useful feature has compounded exponentially the size of the basic film-holding box to where the space allocated for the film almost seems an afterthought. I recall being shocked at the size of my sister's Nikkormat some 30 years ago, having become accustomed to my mother's Retina I: "All that hardware, just to expose a teeny piece of film?" But I digress. One of the best features of the big (fat?) Leica R8 has going for it is the ergonomic design. It's much easier to use either the SL or the R8 than the R4sP with the 250, 400 or 560 lenses because I can get a good grip on the SL or R8, but with the R4sP my grip is more tenuous. The One Big Reason an SLR with the basic layout we're familiar with can't be as small as an M and still be comfortable is the location of the viewfinder. Redesign the beast with the peephole at the left side and there will be no rational justification for something as big as the SL, let alone the R8, F5 or EOS 3. Until this happens a bigger body that can be gripped firmly will be the most useful when using big lenses hand-held. Doug Herr Sacramento http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/telyt