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Joystick on back slightly rotated


Manolo Laguillo

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Attached you will find a view from my M8's back (made qith a D-Lux 4, BTW). I hope you will notice that the joystick is a little bit rotated, I mean, it is not exactly vertical. Does some of you know the explanation? Shall I ask the dealer? Any advice will be welcome. Thank you very much in advance!

Manolo Laguillo

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...please excuse me for making you feel nervous...

Everything works fine, so I don't have to worry.

My speciality is architecture, and I'm spoiled: I do have a bubble level incorporated, it's sort of second nature...

Thank you very much for your answers!

This is a great forum!

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I would not say this is normal. I have had 4 M8s so far, and only one of those had the same misaligned joystick. I returned that M8 but not because of the joystick but other issues. If your M8 is new, from the dealer I would exchange it. Not because of this would not let you take photos with it but because some day you might want to sell it and your potential buyers might be picky about this issue.

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I certainly wouldn't think about returning a camera because of this. As far as I am aware, this is the first time it's been mentioned in the forum, (I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong here.) and has absolutely no effect upon the functioning of the camera. It may even be intended to be this way, as Jaap suggested, or at worst is down to slight manufacturing sample variation. At least some of the pictures of M8 and M8.2 cameras on the Leica website appear to have the same slightly angled control pad.

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if, as someone that likes things squared up and true, you find it annoying..send it back to leica with your diagram for reference to straighten it. it's justifiable if you think there's a fault. you're right, it's not square

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...please excuse me for making you feel nervous...

Everything works fine, so I don't have to worry.

My speciality is architecture, and I'm spoiled: I do have a bubble level incorporated, it's sort of second nature...

Thank you very much for your answers!

This is a great forum!

 

Manolo,

 

I work with die casting tools, I think in 0.01mm in standard, feel 0.05mm gap differences with my fingertips and get annoyed by out of angle adjustments.

 

People, who deal with me on this basis daily think, I am the most annoying, never satisfied person and at least slightly crazy with my view on all things mechanical.

 

 

I have only one tip for you:

 

Relax and use the camera - it is working! Every used thought on the misaligned finish of a plastic button on the back of your digital camera is a waste of your precious time and just not worth it.

 

 

I got an EPSON R-D1 a few months back.

The "misalignments", fit, finish and quirks of this great little camera really have healed my spleen regarding photographic equipment ;-)

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Thank you very much for your comments! Menos, I understand you very well! It can be a pain to live in this imperfect world if someone develops such a sensitivity for the smallest details... ;)

 

This is sort of paradox: for one side, without the attention to this miniscule dimension our world would not be possible, our high technical level is inextricabilly related with it, but on the other side we must forget it in order to live easier...:)

 

My question, anyway, is because I do think, out of experience, that such misalignments are a symptom that something is wrong (ask a osteopath...): if it was centered when new, and now it is rotated, the question is: what happened inbetween? Mine was not an aesthetic concern (I don't care about the slight misalignment if the thing is OK), it was a purely practical doubt: I want the camera to work. Your answers are helpful because we all realize that the rotation is sort of normal: nothing happened inbetween, it was always rotated, from the very beginning, we can conclude.

 

But, again, this is sort of a paradox: a Leica is a Leica, it's a high precision instrument born out from the german search of exactness, minimal tollerances, etc. We pay ridiculous amounts of money for having a couple of stops more in our lenses (Summilux, Summicron, Summarit, Elmarit), being the cheapest one already very expensive, lenses that are a fortune because all the know-how that is behind them.

 

Such rotation of the joystick is, therefore, inacceptable from that point of view! It is a departure of the cartesian spirit (Descartes invented the x, y, z concept: 3 axes at 90 degrees...) that supports modern technology!;) It is a contradiction! :)

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I once visited the Morgan car factory as I had just bought a new Morgan. When I mentioned to the foreman that the gap between the bonnet and the wing was 1/2" wider on one side than the other, he just looked at me and said "You know what - they all have that this year" The joys of handmade products...

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