Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My rant about the battery indicator and subsequent "cheapskate" posting set off a feeding frenzy of comment, so I'll bore you all with a bit of biography. First, I relearned an old lesson, which is don't send email to anyone when you're pissed off about something; wait until you're fully calm. When pissed off, your mind just doesn't work. For example, I damn well knew that the info on number of shots left applies to the SD card, but I managed to forget it. Even worse, I didn't even stop to think about how battery charge indicators had to work. And I should have; I was once a physicist (Ph.D, Univ. of Chicago, 1951). The only way a battery charge indicator can work is to monitor the battery's voltage, and dollars to donuts, that functional relationship probably varies between battery specimens. So, a percentage battery life indication is something between fact and fiction. Re cheapskate, here is the story. I always wanted a Leica, but considered the price out of my range. During the period 1970-1978 I was working in England on a a British salary scale. At one point, a fellow member of a camera club let me handle his M4. All you had to do was work the silky film advance level and click the shutter a couple of times, and, but God, you wanted one. I investigated and decided I could afford to buy a used one, but was spooked by the new price of accessories--items which probably would be hard to find used. That was the ultimate in naivety; if one body and one 50mm lens was good enough for HCB, it should have been good enough for me. Step forward to about ten years ago. I bought a mint used M6 TTL from B & H for $1500, to my mind an extravagant expenditure, never having spent more than a couple of hundred for a camera in the past, things of the order of Rollei 35, Nikon F2 and the like. I then bought a couple of used ancient lenses for about $600 each, a 35mm from that shop in Atlanta, and a 90mm from Henning Wolfe--yes, I discovered the LUG before the Leica purchase. Eventually, darkroom work burned me out. With the obvious exception of Kodachrome, I did my own developing and printing in B&W and color. So, for a couple of years, I quit photography. Then, one fateful day, my wife persuaded me that, in our old age (I'll be 89 in June), wanting to remain in our house, we really needed a second bathroom in the event a caretaker had to live here. There went my darkroom! I really wasn't enthusiastic about digital. I've spent two much of my life dealing with computers. But there was no choice. And I remembered how much I enjoyed using the Leica. I wasn't primarily for the higher quality of the results; I very rarely made prints larger than 8 x 10. It was for the sheer joy of using the thing. So, I bought Lightroom2 and a junk P&S Nikon to see if I could live with digital. When I decided I could, and had the thought "You can't take it with you," I made the plunge and bought the M9. Sticking with my old lenses, however. I still find it hard to think of spending $130 for a battery; it's probably the effect of having grown up during the Great Depression. Re Tina's good experience with $10 Hong Kong batteries: for a number of years, there have been incidents of Li ion batters setting themselves on fire. Granted the odds are against it, and there haven't been recent reports, but my feeling is that I'd want to wait for a couple more years of freedom from such reported incidents before I'd take the chance. Since my living does not depend on getting the picture, I'll probably just see if I can get along with reasonable battery charging discipline. However, if I get bitten just one more time, I'll buy a second Leica battery. Herb -- Herbert Kanner kanner at acm.org 650-326-8204 Do not meddle in the affairs of cats, for they are subtle and will pee on your computer!