Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/18

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Subject: [Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long
From: luisripoll at telefonica.net (Luis Ripoll)
Date: Sat Nov 18 13:25:02 2006

Hi Alastair,

Congartulations for your new M8 and for the Helen gift, your comments has
been very useful for me..., but I'm sorry when I see that I'm depending of a
battery to take pictures...., I'm affraid.

Saludos desde Barcelona
Luis 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: lug-bounces+luisripoll=telefonica.net@leica-users.org
[mailto:lug-bounces+luisripoll=telefonica.net@leica-users.org] En nombre de
Alastair Firkin
Enviado el: s?bado, 18 de noviembre de 2006 6:04
Para: Leica Users Group
Asunto: [Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long

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










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Replies: Reply from firkin at ncable.net.au (Alastair Firkin) ([Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long)
In reply to: Message from firkin at ncable.net.au (Alastair Firkin) ([Leica] 24 hours with my M8: long)