Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/03/30

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Subject: [Leica] Another 50 for the Jeffster
From: msmall at infionline.net (Marc James Small)
Date: Thu Mar 30 17:45:46 2006
References: <3.0.2.32.20060330181047.025de344@pop.infionline.net>

At 05:45 PM 3/30/06 -0600, Jeffery Smith wrote:
>Thanks for the clarification on the lens differentiation, Marc. The lack of
>compatible bodies available is what has steered me away from the Contax line
>of Zeiss RF lenses. True, Voigtlander does make a Contax-compatible body,
>but the price is just too steep for me considering how few Zeiss lenses I
>own (2...both 50's).

Jeffrey

The Voigtl?nder plant produced its last item in the 1970's.  Cosina
produces a camera under the Voigtl?nder brand in Contax RF BM, but it is
not a Voigtl?nder product.

A working Contax II costs around $175 or $200 or often less, and is a
potent instrument -- Capa's shots on the D-Day beaches, for instance, were
made with one of these.  There weakness is that the shutter tapes wear out
over time but these can readily be replaced from a number of sources, most
notably Eddie Smoloff in Brooklyn, who buys his stock from the Arsenal
works in the Ukraine.  Other than this, the mechanism on these cameras is
incredibly tough and will last a long time -- yes, there are many gears and
many bells-and-whistles, but they are all well made to very high standards
from great materials.  

We have had many discussions here about the lack on M6 Leicas of that
buttery shutter advance so notable on earlier Leicas.  The reason was that
earlier Leicas used bronze gears which easily lapped in to each other but
did not last long enough, so Leitz replaced them with steel gears, and
these take decades to lap in.  I suspect my late Wetzlar M6 will be as
buttery in its advance as is my M3 in another three decades or so!  But
I'll have a bunch of worn-out M3 gears to replace in the interim.  Zeiss
Ikon went with steel gears from the get-go with a few exceptions, and the
exceptions are gears which do not bear heavy loads.  

The East German arm of Zeiss Ikon renovated Hubert Nerwin's project for a
Contax SLR and produced it after the War as the Contax S.  Peter Dechert,
who began his professional life shooting a Contax S and Hasselblad 1000F,
comments in his monograph on the camera about the complexity of the gear
train and how shoddily it seems to be made, due to lack of good materials
and of machine tooling which hadn't been worked long beyond its use-by date
due to wartime requirements -- and then even he admits that the only major
weakness in the system is the cord pulling up the mirror and that these
cameras, for all of the warning signs of incipient failure, just keep on
keeping on.

A Contax II is a joy forever.  And it was the Expedition Camera for the
1953 British conquest of Everest, though that picture on the top of Tenzing
was taken with a Prewar Retina with a Zeiss Tessar lens, and shot on
Kodachrome, to boot.

Marc

msmall@aya.yale.edu 
Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!

NEW FAX NUMBER:  +540-343-8505





Replies: Reply from jsmith342 at cox.net (Jeffery Smith) ([Leica] Another 50 for the Jeffster)
In reply to: Message from msmall at infionline.net (Marc James Small) ([Leica] Another 50 for the Jeffster)
Message from jsmith342 at cox.net (Jeffery Smith) ([Leica] Another 50 for the Jeffster)