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Over time, the trim develops a unique patina that reflects the traces of its photographic journey and the character of a true reportage camera.”

But that’s exactly what many owners disliked about it in their experience with the SL2s Reporter—at least based on the posts I’ve read. Also, if Leica is indeed using Kevlar aramid fiber, the fraying and color changes could be attributed to UV light exposure on top of the general wear.

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1 hour ago, thierry40 said:

I used my Q2 rep. For years now without any issues. It spent hours in my hands. 
fyi

Same here. It weathered to a green-grey colour (as Leica predicted). I liked it and would preferentially take a Reporter version of a camera if available at a time when I was buying anyway - the Q2 Reporter was about £200 more than the standard version.

53 minutes ago, jaapv said:

It is telling that Leica uses the general term Aramid. Kevlar is a subclass of Aramid fibre. It suggests that they used a different type of (Kevlar-like) Aramid fibre. 

Did they ever use Kevlar? I know people here used the term, but I don't remember Leica doing so. There were pages of posts about it that I don't want to read again, but IIRC Kevlar is a Dupont brand; Leica just happened to use a similar (identical?) aramid fibre from another supplier.

Edited by LocalHero1953
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2 hours ago, jaapv said:

Kevlar is a fiber from the Aramid family, but different and more brittle than other Aramid fibers. The tensile strength is high enough for applications like bullet proof vests. 
https://knowingfabric.com/aramid-vs-kevlar-real-difference-explained/

DuPont seem to put a lot of effort into trademark protection messaging.

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5 hours ago, SolarChronicle said:

Over time, the trim develops a unique patina that reflects the traces of its photographic journey and the character of a true reportage camera.”

But that’s exactly what many owners disliked about it in their experience with the SL2s Reporter—at least based on the posts I’ve read. Also, if Leica is indeed using Kevlar aramid fiber, the fraying and color changes could be attributed to UV light exposure on top of the general wear.

I guess then I must be in a minority of owners who's absolutely pleased with my experience with the SL2-S Reporter. Never really noticed this or paid attention to its patina changes.

I've dragged the camera all over Africa on safaris and use it alongside my SL3. The camera got exceptionally heavy use on a recent Mountain Gorilla trek in Rwanda. 

In all the years that I've owned Leicas (since 1975), I've never had a green or Safari model, though that's what I do for a living. When the SL2-S Reporter was launched in Oct. 2022, I succumbed to the temptation and traded my SL2-S for the SL2-S Reporter.

I have to admit olive green is probably my favourite colour, the camera also compliments the rest of my gear.... 😊

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Edited by michali
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