Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/02/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> Not quite everyone......... Some of us are really enjoying the > availability of lenses and bodies at bargain basement prices..... > > As of about a year ago, Samys camera in LA had a bunch of 201 cameras new > in the box that they could not sell. Of course, they > wanted full list price...... Yes, inventories are high and dealers are > dumping new inventory through EBay. > > I think Alastair that you have a Hasselblad 205? That is a really pretty > complex beast. I have a 201 ( almost completely > mechanical, about as mechanical as an M7 without a meter) , and I expect > that it will be serviceable for a while, maybe 5-10 years > if I am lucky.... My 501CM will probably be serviceable for as long as an > M3..... There are a lot of 500 parts out there..... And > a lot of repair expertise in the non-factory sector. The 500 series will go on (film may become scarce ;-) ) and the 201 may be mechanical, though I believe my 205 will operate fine without the metering etc. The blad is beautifully built and I would expect (given the lack of repair needed for most of my equipment bar the leica) it will last for years as well, but there will be a very limited supply of parts: already the 205 tcc is OUT. Hasselblad in Australia won't touch it, so I had to find an FCC. This they will fix for a while yet, but not much longer I suspect. Hopefully it will not need "help", but I would not be paying big money for a digital back for it --- as I had thought about before the TCC problem. I'm suffering a bit of the sads about the rapid demise of my darkroom. I know it could continue for years, but the jobo has no spare parts in Oz, Durst are out of enlargers now -- interesting that some say the darkroom / large format is having a re-birth, but we don't see it in Oz and the shut down of these guys does not bode well. I sat working on testing films/developers over teh weekend looking at the colour analysers, colour heads, filters etc etc packs of paper and chemcals all rotting ;-) yes just a dose of the sads. Used to be I was one of the few people who could make his own images. Now anyone can. I'm not denying their right, only the lack of effort required ;-) I'm off to Tasmania in 3 weeks to do a b/w landscape workshop with Richard White and Bruce Barnbaum. I'm working like a devil to be ready and to try to improve my printing, BUT it is obvious to me that if I really wanted to get prints like those guys, a cheque and a little help from Epson would speed me past the post ;-) Cheers Alastair