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What are R users doing now?


SteveYork

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...continuing to use my R8s and DMRs just as I have for the past nearly 4 years now. I will admit though, that I have borrowed a 5D MkII and D700 from friends lately, to see how they handled. If I wasn't as happy as I am with my DMR, I would like go the Canon route, of those two cameras.

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Bought 3 Nikons, D40, D200, and D700 and a whole bag full of Nikon lenses, manual focus and auto, zooms and primes. The last one came last week.

 

The R lenses are resting in my cabinet along with my last purchased R6.2. The rest of the R cams are in the bank vault. Think I used it once or twice since the Nikons.

 

The APO lenses are outstanding on a D700. Use the Leitax mount. The M viso glass goes on with a Camera Quest adapter, 65 to 560. 56/90/135 make a superb bellows lens.

 

I am not waiting for a hokey non slr "solution". Leica gave up because they had no auto focus for the R. It is a non issue for me. 95% of what I do is manual focus, hence a full set of manual focus Nikkors 18 to 300 mm.

 

I will not buy a $7000 M9 from a company that is nearly bankrupt. Who is going to repair it? The S2 is just obscene $$$ for me.

 

I guess that means I am parting company as far a new Leica gear goes. It was nice for 24 years.

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Using ALL of my R system, Leicaflex SL , SL2, R4S, R8/ R9 and DMR..love film..will also use film until it disappears off the planet..probably go back to "glass plate" photography and a large format Lindhof

 

How to flow a glass photography plate with Collodion | Video « Wonder How To

 

Cheers, JRM

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Bought 3 Nikons, D40, D200, and D700 and a whole bag full of Nikon lenses, manual focus and auto, zooms and primes. The last one came last week.

 

The R lenses are resting in my cabinet along with my last purchased R6.2. The rest of the R cams are in the bank vault. Think I used it once or twice since the Nikons.

 

The APO lenses are outstanding on a D700. Use the Leitax mount. The M viso glass goes on with a Camera Quest adapter, 65 to 560. 56/90/135 make a superb bellows lens.

 

I am not waiting for a hokey non slr "solution". Leica gave up because they had no auto focus for the R. It is a non issue for me. 95% of what I do is manual focus, hence a full set of manual focus Nikkors 18 to 300 mm.

 

I will not buy a $7000 M9 from a company that is nearly bankrupt. Who is going to repair it? The S2 is just obscene $$$ for me.

 

I guess that means I am parting company as far a new Leica gear goes. It was nice for 24 years.

 

 

Sometimes pricing and cost is a matter of perspective. In the aggregate, you probably have far more then $7k in your Nikon bodies and lenses and R bodies and lenses. We pick and choose our pleasures. What's the difference between someone w/ an M9 and one or two lenses (that's really all you need for rangefinder photography), and someone else w/ a "full set" of SLR stuff?

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What's the difference between someone w/ an M9 and one or two lenses (that's really all you need for rangefinder photography), and someone else w/ a "full set" of SLR stuff?

 

The difference is that the guy with the M9 can only do "rangefinder photography" (whatever you think that is). The guy (or gal) with a D700 and a suitcaseful of lenses (14 to 400mm, macro, tilt-shift,) can do everything else.:D

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I love the images I got with my R9/DMR but because of the size and weight I found I soon stopped using it. But I can't make up my mind to sell it. I will definitely keep the lenses, convinced Leica will have something, sometime.

 

I find I much prefer to use the digital M. When I need a reflex I use a Pentax K7 which, while in a different league from the DMR, is a really enjoyable camera if size is an issue.

 

In the old film days my favorite was the R6.2, with K7 I get that same (well, nearly) feeling of something that I get my hand around. Plus Pentax has some nice compact prime lenses (not trying to compare them to R glass, mind you...)

 

I second the comment on back problems...

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I love the images I got with my R9/DMR but because of the size and weight I found I soon stopped using it.

 

I also dislike the size & weight of the R8/DMR, but the image quality keeps me using it.

 

... The guy (or gal) with a D700 and a suitcaseful of lenses (14 to 400mm, macro, tilt-shift,) can do everything else.:D

 

... except walk more than a few meters from the car.

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Originally Posted by giordano viewpost.gif

... The guy (or gal) with a D700 and a suitcaseful of lenses (14 to 400mm, macro, tilt-shift,) can do everything else.:D

 

... except walk more than a few meters from the car.

 

When I go out for a morning's shooting I usually take four or five pack mules, a muleteer and my butler. That way, no one notices me and my DSLR.

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The difference is that the guy with the M9 can only do "rangefinder photography" (whatever you think that is). The guy (or gal) with a D700 and a suitcaseful of lenses (14 to 400mm, macro, tilt-shift,) can do everything else.:D

 

Yes, I understand that, but if you don't need macro or telephoto, then an M user can have a M9 and a few lenses, and their total investment in photography, from a purely financial point of view, is probably similar to a DSLR user with a "full set" of everything. That was my only point. It's not the individual cost that's really relevant, but how much is invested in the system as a whole. People shake over, for example, putting $15,000 (US) in an M system (hypothetically one M9 and three lenses), but would have far less trouble putting the same amount into a DSLR system, because they would have more gadgets to show for it, even if the practical need doesn't exist. This was my only point. Sorry I wasn't articulate enough to make you understand the first time around.

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Yes, I understand that, but if you don't need macro or telephoto, then an M user can have a M9 and a few lenses, and their total investment in photography, from a purely financial point of view, is probably similar to a DSLR user with a "full set" of everything. That was my only point. It's not the individual cost that's really relevant, but how much is invested in the system as a whole. People shake over, for example, putting $15,000 (US) in an M system (hypothetically one M9 and three lenses), but would have far less trouble putting the same amount into a DSLR system, because they would have more gadgets to show for it, even if the practical need doesn't exist. This was my only point. Sorry I wasn't articulate enough to make you understand the first time around.

 

Understood.

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Previously a Sigma SD14 converted to R-mount but now, to change my 19 Elmarit back into a 19 Elmarit, a 5D MkII with a CameraQuest EOS-R adaptor, which lets me continue to use all those superb R lenses. (I don't own any Canon glass and I have no plans to do so. :))

 

Pete.

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