Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/07/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 3:17 PM -0400 7/7/00, B. D. Colen wrote: >> It's equally likely that the 15-hour massage by a 747 on the run to Sydney >> loosened something up. >> >> Cameras are just mechanical contrivances, and can be expected to go off >> song. In the words of Patsy Stone (Joanna Lumley), "It's all fixable." > >Okay, we like Lykas, or we wouldn't be on this list....but do we have to >sound like a bunch of freaking company boosters all the time. A camera that >can't take one 747 flight without developing shutter bounce is, pardon my >whatever, a piece of crap. Period. I can just hear Nachtwey calling Time in >New York and telling the picture desk - > >"About those Kosovo combat photos you were expecting...I'm afraid you won't >get them - seems my wonderful Lyka developed shutter bounce on the way over >here. But it's not important. The shutter can be fixed." > >Come on guys. It's a terrific camera, but it's produced by a company that >really want to produce a boutique product with a boutique image, without >providing the quality control and support that goes with it. If I buy a >Parker Duofold fountain pen it is guaranteed FOR LIFE. Can't Lyka even get a >"perfect" product off the shelf of the dealer and into the buyer's hands? > > >> I've flown twice to Europe and arrived to find that a Nikon product had shed screws. Once, there were just screws in the bottom of the bag, and I could replace them into the Camera body easily. Once, a lens helicoid refused to budge due to a screw coming loose inside. In both cases the equipment was in regular camera bags as carry-on, and probably sat on the floor in front of me most of the time. I've had QC problems out of the box with Nikon equipment many times. With Canon, just a couple of times, but then I've only had Canon SLR's for a few years and only have a few lenses. Some Sinar stuff has had QC problems, some Mamiya stuff, some Gitzo etc. So far (40 years worth) Leica stuff has been free of initial QC problems except for one time, an M4-2, where one of the strap eyelets let go in a disastrous fashion, but various stuff has had to go in for servicing. Leica replaced that body, and the lens on it as well as soon as I brought it in. For 10 years I used Konica SLR stuff. It had neither QC problems nor was any of it ever in for repair. It just _sounded_ like it should go in for repari! :-) Over the years I've owned and used about 15 to 20 Leica bodies, and about 60 lenses. No QC issues except that once. I've had about a dozen Nikon bodies, and about 50 lenses. About 10 or 15 QC problems, including a series of 5 lenses of the same type before I found one that worked. This was the first compact 35-105 zoom. I'm sure that one of these times I'll get another item from Leica that has a defect, but that's the way of all wordly things, whether from automated assembly lines or handmade. Leica is not the be-all end-all camera brand. The cameras and lenses allow me to do certain things in a way that I like, and I'm willing to shell out for this. If I feel I can't trust a camera, I leave it at home. If I realize after a while that I've left it at home quite often due to this distrust, I get rid of it. Leicas, Nikons and Canons all come with me as the situations arise. They all have their purpose, and the ones I have now all work fine. * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw@archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com