The absence of a moving mirror does wonders for hand-holding ability. If the Leica had leaf-shutter lenses too, you'd be amazed at how much you could get away with.
An 18MP Kodak KAF-18500 CCD seems pretty 'technologically excellent' to me (although I've not seen what it'll do yet)
..without a moire filterwhich just about every DSLR manufacturer seems to think is necessary..
Don't go taking pics of net curtains with your M9!
A.
I don't have net curtains......without a moire filterwhich just about every DSLR manufacturer seems to think is necessary..
Don't go taking pics of net curtains with your M9!
You're right, I would be amazed. Do you mean it's like a compact then? I'm still grateful for the IS on my Canon G7.
Oh please stop!![]()
You say that you can see "something" special about the quality of the Leica files on the LCD. The only thing that's unusual about the M9's LCD is that it is rather small and has feeble resolution compared to the best screen today - it's an inexcusable oversight.
Then lack of a mirror is worth two stops of IS. Even Darren Brown can't do those kind of miracles.
I can totally understand that.The size of the camera and lenses (the body is actually slightly larger than you might think) was the thing that might have done it for me to be honest - the lenses are so small that I actually found it quite difficult to manually focus them with my podgy fingers. Maybe it would just be a case of 'getting used to it', but I can usually pick things up and get to grips with them in minutes. Not here though. I suspect if the price were an order of magnitude smaller, I might have given it a go, but it didn't seem like the right thing for me to do this time.
... hasn't the majority of this thread got something slightly out of focus here... are we not comparing apples with pears... or even potatoes...
Or am I missing something so fundamental here that I need to go boil my head in tar...
Nikon D3x?Ultimately, the key comparison is what do you get for your money? And that one is pretty tricky too, as there aren't many £5k cameras about.
So... if we want to compare apples let's do Leica's own DSLR, rather than its RangeFinder, with the rest and not lose sight of the fact we are talking a totally different animal... horses for courses and all that chaps 'n chapesses...
Or am I missing something so fundamental here that I need to go boil my head in tar...![]()
Nikon D3x?
I love Leicas too - I own one, in fact...I love the craftsmanship, the looks, the feel and the weight...
And that's without even going into how well (or badly) the new digital technology compares against modern DSLR systems...
Arkady said:Remember my original comments by the Service Manager in Milton Keynes?
No-one uses them for 'real' photography anymore...
We might own a few, but using them on a job...? Forget it...
Good thought, but it's not really a head boiling offenceThere isn't a Leica DSLR.
...possibly a bit too subtle in writing...Hoppy said:Fact of the matter is the the Leica M9 is different. Uniquely so.

You're missing the fact that Leica no longer make an SLR or a DSLR Rog.. I'm old enough to remember the launch of the original Leicaflex and reading the reviews of it (and later models they produced.) The general concensus was that they were superbly built - the very best of German engineering, but over-priced and lacking the features of their competitors. As a result, they were bought mainly by the well-heeled enthusiast, with most serious users buying other makes.
It's all reminiscent of Rollei - back in the late 50s and early 60s virtually every pro and enthusiast used a Rollei TLR, and back then there was still mucho scorn being heaped on the tiny 35mm format in comparison to the larger Rollei format. Rollei was a hugely successful giant corporation with the photographic world at it's feet. They failed to recognize the threat of 35mm SLRs from the East and the fact that with improvements in film stock more and more users were adopting the smaller format, or if they saw the threat they didn't take it seriously. It was almost as though they were saying "We're Rollei and we know what's good for you."
Eventually they did start to produce some 35mm cameras, but it was too late, the competitors had stolen a huge lead, and Rollei went to to the wall.
I think this started with the Nikon F (?), but the trend accelerated and the 35mm SLR became the weapon of choice for most photographers.

There was a press tog named Victor Blackman who used to write a column in Amateur Photographer describing his assignments and he was always full of enthusiasm for the A1 while still retaining his Nikons. Please tell me someone else remembers him.![]()
There was a press tog named Victor Blackman who used to write a column in Amateur Photographer describing his assignments and he was always full of enthusiasm for the A1 while still retaining his Nikons. Please tell me someone else remembers him.![]()
I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that Pentax introduced TTL metering...which was why it was so popular...doing away with the need for a hand-held seperate light-meter must have been a Godsend in those days...
Blimey! There's a blast from the past...I remember him well (now that you've reminded me...lol)...
It's a fair cop... I'd kind of forgotton about the Pentax S1a and the dearer SV IIRC. I did have an S1a briefly - couldn't afford the SV.Though I'd take issue with the F2 and A1 being the start of the Japanese 'invasion'... that falls to Pentax - lots of press guys in Vietnam bought Pentax M-42 lenses for their Leicas in the early '60's and when the Spotmatic SLR came out, switched to them - Nikon came soon after, but it was Pentax that paved the way - their lenses at that time were even better than the Leitz equivalents and far-better priced...Lietz soon came back, but by then it was already too late...
Nikon F bodies were the first dedicated 'Pro' workhorse, but lots of guys were using Pentax SLRs and Nikon rangefinders well into the 70's, simply because they were as good as Leicas and half the price...
I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure that Pentax introduced TTL metering...which was why it was so popular...doing away with the need for a hand-held seperate light-meter must have been a Godsend in those days...
It was indeed Pentax - they introduced TTL metering in the Spotmatic of course. Pentax have been real innovators over the years..., first instant return mirror, first aperture priority camera, (with the ME) First AF lenses I seem to recall, although they were great bulky things with a huge AF motor on the side?
Yes they were...HUGE things...
Pentax were always innovators, but they never really capitalised...
I always wanted them to make a pro body and when they finally did it was the LX which was a bit quirky and wasn't really adopted in any great numbers. That seemed to put an end to any ideas Pentax had of producing a pro camera.