Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/08/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Sandy: > Bottom line...of my three M6's (recent production) I sent *one* back to Leica > NJ for an under-warranty vertical alignment adjustment, not because it was > causing a problem with the finished product, but simply because the lack of > alignment was driving me crazy. (I should have checked this before I bought the > camera, but since it was my first Leica, I didn't know any better...Thanks to > the LUG, I now know how to check these aspects before I buy :-) I was without > the camera for seven days and it has worked perfectly ever since - even > surviving trips on express prop planes on which the vibration is enough to > loosen dental fillings! All of the posts are still making me a bit quesy about buying an M6 again, even though I know I need to. When I used Nikon's for about 20 years, I had only one failure that occured after 800 rolls on an F4. The 3 other bodies (F2, FG, FM-2) never missed a beat. I currently have 3 Contax bodies and they have been rock solid. The only Leica I owned (an M6 classic from 5 years ago) had its meter go funny on me, and now that you mention it, the vertical alignment was also out of adjustment ! I'm wondering if we don't have a case here of the Emperor not wearing any clothes. A substantial percentage of the posts on reliability have indicated that maintenance was required, yet everyone seems to be singing praises to the reliability. When the R8 first came out, about 35% of the people in the Photoforum of Compuserve who bought them had to return them for repair. The flash connections didn't work on more than a few, and one poor guy couldn't remove a lens after he put it on. Those that bought the early winders had even more trouble. I guess that what I want is a nice small Nikon or Canon rangefinder body that would accept the Leica lenses. Then I could have the best of both worlds. Michael