Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/17

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Subject: [Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long
From: msadat at gmail.com (mehrdad)
Date: Fri Nov 17 21:26:23 2006
References: <24a.db98482.328fab69@aol.com> <p0623090ac1840aefc2af@10.1.16.129> <15C76E5A-78FD-42DE-B111-FDE0C88F5151@ncable.net.au>

i think one of the biggest problem with leica digital experience, is
working with two different companies to do two different cameras, the
DMR was done with imacon, a company who was well versed in digital and
i think, they kept leica in the dark and sort handed over a black box
to them for testing, this one leica was more involved and not having
the experience  and what market would except plus a very bad roll out,
has caused both leica and us a lot of grief. it is obvious the it is a
great beginning but not ready for prime time, having said that, i will
hold on to my m8 as is (now that i have hot filters, thanks tony rose)
and might even get another one to send to leica for the fixes one at
time so that i have always one with me. i am upset at leica but not at
M8.

it would be interesting to find out who was their partner in this  venture

On 11/17/06, Alastair Firkin <firkin@ncable.net.au> wrote:
> I have had the M8 for 19 hours (including one sleep, while the
> battery recharged) and I can report that at this stage --
>
> "Don't worry: be happy"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> L1000011.JPG.html
>
> "Happy loving couples make it look so easy"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> L1000068.jpg.html
>
> When I turned 40, Helen surprised me with an M6, a decade later, I've
> just bought my first pair of reading glasses and Helen has bought me
> an M8. So here are some impressions from day one. Firstly, thank you
> to Helen and the guys at camera exchange. It has been a pleasure
> dealing with you for over 20 years. Its only a shame the shop is so
> busy ;-)
>
> Thanks to the warnings of others, I had the the battery charged
> before I arrived, so I was ready to experiment as soon as it was
> loaded in the quirky "chamber".
>
> If you just want the results, here's an album:
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/Images+from+the+M8/
>
> But to read some comments, please continue
>
> "So take a letter Maria"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> 028.JPG.html
>
> Point One: Leica should be congratulated on this camera. Even with
> the undoubted shortcomings, and I will show some of my examples
> later, this is the first generation of a high quality rangefinder
> digital camera and most of what they have done seems to work. Leica
> rely on third parties for the sensor, and will NEVER in my life time
> be likely to do otherwise. Leica do not have the cash flows of Canon
> and do not have the experience in digital photography: lets be
> honest, no one has the grunt or experience that Canon have, BUT Canon
> do not make a rangefinder camera, so it is really pretty pointless
> making too many comparisons with Canon SLRs, except to hold them up
> as today's gold standards.
>
> It is a long way from:
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/Leica-Product/
> product001.jpg.html
>
> In my opinion based on a days use (big deal I know) Leica have made
> some good progress. The camera is "faster" than the DMR, the software
> seems a little more refined (my experience with the DMR is also
> limited so this is just a gut feeling), the files come up faster,
> write to the card faster and are smaller. They download faster to the
> computer as a result and I only needed to buy a 2 gig card to hold
> close to 200 images.
>
> Then there is the underlying reason many of us will buy the M8. We
> want to use our M lenses and we like using rangefinder cameras. I
> suspect we are using the M lenses but not to their fullest extent
> (even though Leica would like to tell us so), but the results are
> really very satisfying in terms of Lens to Image translation.
>
>
> Point Two: unlike Tina, I found the camera "flew" into action very
> quickly. I focused on a table under very low light, kept watching
> through the finder as I turned the camera "on" and then waited for
> the camera to give me a shutter speed on "A" setting and fired ASAP.
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> 041.JPG.html
>
> Well I reckon that the image was shot in just under one second: I was
> delighted. The camera also seems to fire up as quickly from "sleep".
> So touching the shutter release, or swinging the camera to on as you
> raise it to your eye will give the camera time to be ready to shoot.
>
>
> Point three: shutter lag is not noticeable EXCEPT with TTL flash,
> where the initial flash makes a delay that I could notice, and I
> wondered if the dog's eyes were "blinking" by the time the shutter
> and real flash fired.
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> flash1.JPG.html
>
> I have not used it yet as fill flash with people, but the lag may
> effect the result.
>
> "He ain't heavy, he's my brother"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> 032.JPG.html
>
> My first impression was how small the battery was, how light, how
> neat, no wonder you will have a limited battery life. Because the
> battery is so small, it will be no effort to carry one or two spares,
> and using a small battery has limited the weight and size of the
> camera. Knowing that battery technology is improving, this may mean
> our cameras or the next generation will have even better life, but I
> managed to take a full 2 gig card, chimp through the images at the
> restaurant 2 or 3 times and download to the computer before it died.
> We are told it will get better, so i think it will be "good-enough"
> if not excessive for a user like me.
>
> Then I un-wrapped the camera, and it is solid, well in fact it is
> heavy, but apart from feeling like my M6 on steroids, the M digital
> is as everyone else has reported, an M feeling camera. A few minor
> lessons and within minutes I was shooting in "A" (aperture priority)
> and "M" (manual, or as I have always thought of it shutter priority).
> The viewfinder is bright, the rangefinder seems accurate and I was
> even happy focusing the 135mm with it. I suppose I reached for the
> winder on 2 or 3 occasions, but the "strange" feeling was that the
> camera was living after each shot, as the motor recocked the shutter.
> That and the noise were a little off-putting to a M user, but I soon
> became used to it.
>
> "As tight as a dope fiend's fix my friend, step in close and take
> your stuff"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> tightas1.JPG.html
>
> It has never really bothered me that the framing in the M was a
> little "loose". I've always done my own printing, I have great
> enlargers and the quality of film was good enough to allow me a happy
> "wastage", but I feel a bit different with digital (though I suppose
> it will pass). Being as most of you know a bit "tight", I like to get
> my value, and so if I've got 10.3 million pixels to use, I want to
> use them all. Besides, the sensor real estate is expensive and
> already crops my lenses back by 30%. I immediately noticed that the
> "image verification" which hits the monitor with lightning speed
> (except in very low light conditions such as leaving the mirror down
> on the visoflex) was showing me a fair degree more than I had
> expected. On my very crude test: focused at as close as I could get
> to the figure the framing means I go from an image of 3900 x 2600
> Pixels to 3300 x 2100 (ok, I know I have not done this in perfect
> ratio, but you get the idea) a loss of about 15%. So step in close
> then take another step.
>
> So here is the result
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> tightas1.JPG.html
>
> And this is about the excess outside the framelines
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> tightas2.JPG.html
>
> "Dust clusters to me like moths around the flame"
>
> I was reasonably careful, I did not "inspect" the shutter and changed
> lenses as swiftly as I could, The earliest image I kept - frame two,
> seems free of dust, but by frame 7, it was there already.
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> dust.JPG.html
>
> This dust problem must plague all non-self cleaning cameras and the
> M8 is no different but cleaning the sensor is pretty easy. You need a
> fairly fully charged battery before the camera will even let you do
> it, but you switch to clean sensor in the menu, open the shutter and
> blow away furiously with the rubber knob of the blower brush:
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> deDusted.JPG.html
>
> the next day, I did this and could only find a couple of small
> remnant specks, BUT this shows how idiotic some of our obsession with
> pixel perfect really is, and again, makes me very impressed with the
> Olympus E 500, who still has no sign of dust after hundreds of
> "unprotected" lens changes. Of course the Olympus takes much longer
> to start up!!!!. I would like an ultrasonic cleaning of the sensor at
> the touch of a button "when I wanted it"!!! Seems dust is now my
> enemy before I reach the darkroom.
>
> "Oh dear what can I do, baby's in black and she's turning blue"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> bINb1.JPG.html
>
> The above image of black clad persons in sunshine, and below a group,
> where I at first wondered if the T shirt on the girl in the
> foreground was affected, till I spotted the black T shirt on the girl
> behind: I think the colours are pretty good in these situations.
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> bINb4.JPG.html
>
> So what of the famed "issues" which have already been discussed on
> this forum and others. I reasoned that the infrared problem would be
> worse at night. After all, there is less normal visible light and the
> body may give off a greater percentage of IR. Well to some extent I
> suspect it is true. Above are two images of people wearing black in
> the sunlight, and I'm not sure how much effect there is, but at night
> in the restaurant I took an image of the waitress who was in "black".
> The first image is the camera's impression of the scene under
> "tungsten" setting ISO 1250
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> bINb2.JPG.html
>
> and the second with PS's "auto-colour". Compared with the belt it
> remains pretty "blue".
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> bINb2a.JPG.html
>
> I'm pretty impressed with the high ISO performance, though I know the
> Canons do it better, this is not too grubby compared with film!!! I
> agree that Leica or Kodak or someone needs to find a reasonable
> solution to this IR cast. If I am right and it becomes a real issue
> in low light, then we will need to have hi-pass filters on our
> Noctilux ;-) As Helen said: dark blue is NOT the new black. For me,
> iffff it is an issue at high ISO and low light levels and I have to
> put up with it, I'll live with it and try to remember to put a filter
> on.
>
> "When everything old is new again"
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> Everythingold.JPG.html
>
> I have attached the visoflex and it works, but the shutter arm is on
> the edge of the release, and you do need to give the camera time to
> set the meter, so it did not work with the last instant mirror
> release setting. You needed to raise the mirror slowly and then hit
> the release. Of course I soon noticed that the framing was "off"
> before realizing that the framing difference was the difference
> between the 35mm film size and the sensor size.
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> everythingold2.JPG.html
>
> So it was very late when we got home to feed the dogs ;-)
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/M8+testing/
> availabledark1.JPG.html
>
>
> Summary
> The DMR is an interesting hybrid and has 2 possible big selling
> points for longevity:
>
> 1) to replace the sensor, Leica could continue to develop the back
> and I would not have to buy a new camera and
>
> 2) you can get to the sensor. I've already praised the Olympus dust
> reduction on this list: it seems to work very well, but for how long.
> Compared with cameras which rely on a return to the dealer for
> cleaning, the DMR and now the M8 are streets ahead, especially if
> like me you are planning on using them for 2 to 5 years. If
> yesterdays experience is anything to go by, the camera would be
> heading back to be cleaned DAILY.
>
> The colour problem needs to be solved: I may be able to live with it
> using filters, as long as the situations in which the filters are
> needed are predictable and few. It is the only real failing of the
> camera so far in my testing.
>
> So here are a few other examples in one album
>
> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Alastair/album184/Images+from+the+M8/
>
> Thanks for listening and happy shooting
>
> Cheers
> Alastair
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Leica Users Group.
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>


-- 
  -------------------------------------
  regards, mehrdad

In reply to: Message from SonC at aol.com (SonC@aol.com) ([Leica] Friday flower)
Message from firkin at ncable.net.au (Alastair Firkin) ([Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long)