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Problem with Shutter of Leica M8


ulli-b

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Hallo,

 

I recently bought a used Leica M8 in "great condition" at ebay in order to be able to collect some experience in the rangefinder world.

 

Having received the camera today, the condition is realy great despite a small bent of one shutter blade (see attached picture). At the moment, the camera is functioning well, but I am fearing that this small bend might lead to further and more serious damage...

 

What do you think? Sould I send the camera back to the seller using the paypal/ebay buyer protection?

 

Thanks for your kind support!

 

Best regards

 

Uli

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Yes, definitely send it back....clearly not in the condition it was listed in....the less people tolerate seller's trying to fob us off with damaged goods, hopefully the less will be listed. Buy another one that is correctly described :)

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Don't know what country your in but here in the UK prices for the M8 are rapidly approaching £1000 at most reputable Dealers who offer a warranty with it, no need to chance your arm with fleabay, cheers Rob

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Ebay is where the defectives are sold to the unsuspecting.

 

Follow all the rules sending it back so you get your money.

 

I would also read all the M8 posts here about ir sensitivity, purple blacks, uv/ir filters, and coded lenses. The camera can be made to work well, just not by slapping on a lens and using it like any camera should work. The M9 is a better start place.

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The camera can be made to work well, just not by slapping on a lens and using it like any camera should work. The M9 is a better start place.

 

Yep, just slap a lens on the M9….

 

...oh, except be aware of lens coding, red edge, buffer issues, card issues, lack of perfect IR filtration (not as effective as UV/IR filter use), etc.

 

Sure, the M9 is a fine camera, but an M8.2 can be a great place to start…as long as one buys from a reputable dealer. And, for less money, one gets 2m frame lines, top LCD display, sapphire screen, and an especially fine b/w camera.

 

Regardless the choice, it's always smart to first read up on any camera…including the forum FAQs for any M.

 

Jeff

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