Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/02/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Martin H.: >>>I'm guessing the fact that it lost 1/3 (or is it 2/3) aperture steps through the use of it's fixed mirror had something to do with it. For most people, the difference between 100ms and 1/3 stop falls in favor of the 1/3 stop.<<< Martin, Right, although I felt that that was too often a case of shopping on paper--in a year of using the RT, I never felt the light loss was an inconvenience to me. Shopping on paper--I mean from hands-off analysis of the spec sheet and the feature list--is the bane of good camera design; it makes the M6 seem like absolute crap, for instance. It's not a good way to look at things. A similar example is saying that one camera that has a 1/8000 top speed is worse than one with a 1/12,500 top speed. Harumph. In practice, is this ever going to actively be a frustration? I doubt it. And it was _ten_ milliseconds shutter lag, Martin, not 100--some top SLRs are around 60 ms. But that was only in "RT mode," not all the time. The M6--champion to my knowledge up until the release of the RT--has a shutter delay of a mere 18 ms., which has always been one of its great felicities in practice. It's as fast as you are. Would you believe that some point-and-shoots have been designed, marketed, and sold with a shutter lag time of as long as *two seconds*? Boggles the mind. That absolutely inane "feature," red-eye reduction, often means a practical shutter lag time of even longer. Ridiculous way to take photographs! - --Mike