Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/07/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Question: Do the Leica diopters have a rubber eyepiece or a metal one? Here's why I ask. Yesterday's shooting with my M8 brought home a change. I am no longer nearsighted in either eye, so briefly taking off my glasses to read the controls no longer works. For distance vision, my left eye needs no correction. My right (shooting) eye takes +0.25 diopter and a bit of astigmatism correction Plus some prism which keeps my eyes aligned when looking to one side, especially important when driving. In general, though, I am quite comfortable walking around without glasses. Reading, computer, and anything closer than ~6' (~2m) requires a corrective lens. With the OM-D this is no problem. I just wear my bifocals, set the diopter for best focus, and all's well. The M8 is another matter. I can shoot it without glasses, not perfect, but usable. But then I can't read the controls and menus. I can shoot it with glasses, but then I definitely need a diopter correction. I have one of those Megaperls 1.1x magnifiers, which has a variable diopter correction. It works well, and I love using it bare-eyed. But its eyepiece is metal and has two little notches in it where you insert your fingernail to turn the eyepiece to adjust the diopter correction. So while I'd love to use the the Megaperls magnifier with my bifocals, the metal eyepiece would likely scratch my glasses. So I think I'm going to need a diopter that works with the distance lens of my bifocals. Or I'll have to use the Megaperls bare-eyed and have my glasses on a cord around my neck to read the controls. Awkward. I even thought today about getting a monocle (or its equivalent, a little magnifying glass I could keep in my shirt pocket). Then I could be like Inspector Kemp in "Young Frankenstein." All suggestions welcome. Monovision contacts are not really an option any more. --Peter