Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/11/23

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Subject: Leicaflex vs Nikon F
From: Stephen <cameras@jetlink.net>
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 1997 21:50:21 -0800

Marc James Small wrote:

> At 03:52 AM 11/23/97 -0500, Marvin Moss, man of noted worth, wrote:
> >When  Leitz got into the act
> > in 1964 with the 1st Leicaflex,  it was so far behind  the Nikon and
>
> > Canon technology that it took over 25 years to catch up.
>
> This is a commonly accepted canard.  The Leicaflex was quite
> competitive
> for its time (snip)

> Nikon got its lead not by technical innovation  (snip)

Marc,

With all due respect, these statements simply are not true.

From DAY  ONE  of its introduction in June of 1959, the Nikon F offered
a list of accomplishments which to THIS DAY  no Leica SLR has matched!

1) the fastest production motor drive of its day   4 fps
2) interchangeable finders and focusing screens
3) a lens lineup  from 21 mm to 1000 mm
4) a finder which showed absolutely 100% of the film plane

In addition, by the time the Leicaflex was introduced in 1964, Nikon had
added:

1) it's first slr Macro lens (1961)
2) the world's first 35 mm tilt/shift lens (1962)
3) the world's first production 35 mm fisheye lens (1962)
4) the world's first production 35 mm zoom lens (85-250) (1959)
5) Nikon's first medical macro with built in focus assist and strobe
(1962)
6) tele lenses with auto diaphragms from 400 to 1200 mm (1964)
7) fast long tele 400/4.5  (1964)
8) fast wide 35/2 (1962)

Nikon built its reputation on technical innovation which no other
manufacturer could match in the 1960's.   More of the Nikon F's history
is at my site at  http://cameraquest.com/fhistory.htm


In contrast, the Leicaflex standard in 1964 had

1) NO motor or winder capability
2) NO capability to interchange finders or screens
3) a five lens line up covering only 21-135, no zooms, longer than 135
was done with a Viso adapter setup WITHOUT  auto diaphragm operation
4) less than 100% finder area and no provision to show Depth of Field in
the finder
5) no 50/1.4 lens
6) no fast wide angles
7) no fast teles

This is not to say that the Leicaflex was not a fine camera, it was, and
is.  But to say it was competitive to the Nikon F of 1964, is like
saying the stripped down Volkswagen bug was competitive to the Rolls
Royce because they both had  four wheels.

Regards,

Stephen Gandy