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Leica MP Goes to the Arctic


Stewart Weir

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I hope Mr. Hartley takes along a spare; MP is a great camera but ''stuff happens'' :(

 

Quite, like my M7 washing into the Indian Ocean in the Boxing Day Tsunami, 26 December 2004.

LEICA ELMARIT-M 24mm f/2.8 ASPH included.

 

Not something you can prepare for!

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  • 1 month later...
M4-P, 21/3.4 Super-Angulon-M, 9cm Elmar 1:4, Sekonic L-208 (one second battery) and lots of film.... :)

 

The batteries in the M4-P and Sekonic will not like the cold, you need remote battery packs if you are going to let the kit go down in temperature.

 

Noel

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The batteries in the M4-P and Sekonic will not like the cold, you need remote battery packs if you are going to let the kit go down in temperature.

 

Noel

 

Since when did the M4-P use batteries? It is a meter-less camera.

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I doubt the new pictures will be any better than those currently on show in a Hamburg Gallery:.

 

Well when your name is Hurley or Ponting and you have a square foot of glass plate to point at Mawson or Scott its pretty hard to see how nothing else stacks up amongst the ice:rolleyes:.

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Spot on NB23 on at least two counts.

My M4-P took all the Canadian Arctic could do to it and in Manchuria this winter past a 28 was the only focal length used. Very happy with my pictures!

Yours,

R. Morrison

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specially tested could mean lots of things. I suppose it is possible to change the lubricants for thinner ones in preparation for extreme cold. Shooting in -20 degs C its amazing how stiff lenses can become. funnily enough my ZMs fared a lot better than the Leica lenses in this regard.

 

Just like tanks, where firepower, maneuverability and protection all trade off, its the same with camera kit. You need more until you get to the point where less is better. For me thats a couple of M bodies and 3-4 lenses.

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He's the guy quoted as saying that below minus 40 C electronic circuits slow down and become unreliable. :rolleyes:

 

This is why only mechanical satillites are sent into orbit. As you know, it is a balmy -270 degrees Celsius, or -455 Fahrenheit. This would be much too cold to have something important dependent on electric circuits. ;)

 

All kidding aside, I understand why he is taking an MP and I agree with him, I just disagree with some of his logic and think a Nikon F4 would fare just fine. Heck, I think if he took a D700 with 3-4 batteries and turned off the photo review he would be fine.

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I took an M4 to the USAF base at Thule, Greenland, in 1974, for a month in the dead of winter. No problems with shutter speeds, but the lens focus and f stop rings settings were VERY stiff at -20F. (50 Summicron and 35mm Summicron).

 

I worried more about my fingers, hands and toes than I did about the camera.

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