The Mysterious Leica M5 of 1992: We now know more, but not all!Wetzlar made 20 M5s 17 years after it ceased production, but why?

The Mysterious Leica M5 of 1992: We now know more, but not all!

Wetzlar made 20 M5s 17 years after it ceased production, but why?

By Jason Schneider

Leica cameras are renowned for their superb construction, gorgeous finish, optical excellence, and (mostly) elegant form factors. But they also enjoy another less obvious distinction—many Leica models had very long production runs because they continued to sell reasonably well years, or even decades, after they were first announced. Notable examples include the Spartan rangefinder-less Leica Standard (Model E) which debuted in 1932 and was listed in the catalog until 1950; the landmark Leica M3 of 1954 to 1967 (over 220,000 units were made!); the first cast alloy bodied Leica, the IIIc of 1940 to 1951, and the best-selling Leica M6 of 1984 to 1998.

Except for the current Leica M6 that was re-introduced 2022 (it’s largely based on the currect Leica MP) Leica has never resurrected a discontinued model—unless you count the 20 mysterious Leica M5s that were assembled in 1992, 17 years after a total of 33,900 Leica M5 cameras (10,750 in silver, 23,150 in black chrome and including 1.750 50th Anniversary Jubilee models) were assembled between the official production dates of 1971 to 1975. Why did they do it? Read on.

M5-dwg.jpg

The Leica M5 (drawing) with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux: Yes, it's big, heavy, and not as pretty as a Leica M3, but do you really think it's plug ugly? Not I, said the fly!

A brief overview of the ill-fated Leica M5

The M5 thar debuted in 1971 was the first rangefinder Leica with coupled, TTL, match-needle, selective area (semi-spot) metering, the first M to display selected shutter speeds in the finder, and the first and only Leica that let you set intermediate shutter speeds between ½ and 1/1000 sec. It was also the last Leica M to offer a mechanical self-timer, and the last “bench assembled” Leica M with fully adjustable range/viewfinder calibration. Like the M4, the M5 has a 0.72x viewfinder with projected, parallax-compensating, auto-indexing frame lines for 35, 50, 90, and 135mm lenses, but it also employs an ingenious semaphore-mounted CdS cell that moves into position behind the lens for metering and swings out of the way just before the shutter fires. Finally, it has the largest shutter-speed dial of any Leica, conveniently overhanging the camera front, and an improved quick-loading system. Regrettably, despite its technological prowess, the Leica M5 was a colossal marketing disaster, and its poor sales almost sank the M system. Leica fans rejected it largely because it didn’t look or feel like their beloved Leica Ms. Its die-cast body was too large and heavy, it originally came with 2 side-mounted neck strap lugs for a vertical-only hang (though a third was quickly added in response to vociferous complaints), and they detested its inelegant “industrial” from factor, particularly when compared to the classic M3, M2 and M4.

Black Leica M5i standard issue with 50mm f:1.4 Summilux lens in chrome..jpg

Black Leica M5 standard issue with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux lens in chrome. Leica aficionados loved to hate it when it was announced, but not anymore. It's a formidable picture taker!

By the time Leitz released an unanticipated and largely unannounced batch of 20 new chrome M5s in 1992, the fury over its un-Leica-like form factor had mostly subsided and its enduring virtues as a shooter’s camera (as reflected in moderately increasing prices for used M5s) were finally appreciated. However, that doesn’t fully explain why Leitz would go to the trouble of making them. One possible answer is money. In the early 1990s Leica was in a precarious financial state due to declining sales and strategic missteps such as failing to effectively respond to its Japanese competitors. While the sale of 20 M5’s alone wouldn’t solve all the company’s fiscal woes, it could well have been a case of “every little bit helps.”

 Leica M5 page from Leica-Wiki includes with serial number range of 20 made in 1992.jpg.png
Leica M5 page from Leica-Wiki includes with serial number range of 20 made in 1992--see line above Total at bottom of numerical listing.

What are the exact serial numbers and dates of this alleged run of Leica M5s turned out in Wetzlar in 1992—a “fact” seriously questioned by many leading Leica authorities in the U.S. and Europe? According to the production stats posted on Leica-Wiki (included here) the “total assigned serial numbers” bottom line shows that 33.420 M5s were made between 1971 and 1992. However, the line just above the total reads “1918001 1918020 Leica M5 Hell 1992 20,” indicating the serial number range of a batch of 20 silver finished (Hell in German) Leca M5 cameras that were turned out in 1992. While most Leica historians do not credit Leica-Wiki to with being a dispositive source of information, they are generally correct, and they seem to be in target in this case. How do we know?

For starters, a recent eBay listing shows a clean Leica M5 body in chrome, serial No. 1918015, that was allegedly manufactured in 1992 and bears an appropriate serial number in the range posted on Leica-Wiki The asking price: a paltry $1,888.00, only a tad more than the average selling price of a standard issue used M5. Apparently, the same camera was offered at around $3,000 on an eBay auction in Europe, so the actual selling price (if any) of this camera is unknown. Further research turned up another 1992 Leica M5, serial No.1918020, that was sold at Leitz Photographica Auction number 37 held on November 21, 2020, for the hefty sum of 7,200 Euros (then equivalent to a staggering $8,222.40). These guys don’t mess around, so we’re confident that this provenance is correct. And it’s highly unlikely that both these cameras are imposters.

A 1992 Leica M5? Yes, the serial numer is in the proper range and the engraving looks original...jpg
A 1992 Leica M5? Yes, the serial numer is in the proper range and the engraving looks original. Asking price on eBay was a steal at $1,888.00!

 Leitz Photographica Ayction No. 37 page showing Leica M5, serial No. 1918020 made in 1992 sol...png
Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37 page showing Leica M5, serial No. 1918020 made in 1992 sold for 7,200 Euros on Nov. 21, 2020!



So how did a score of “post-production” Leica M5s come into existence? According to the scuttlebutt among serious Japanese and European Leica collectors who were in the know about this mysteriously unannounced batch of Leica M5s, they were assembled at the request of some well-connected Japanese dealer who paid cash in advance. However, since nobody could identify this well-heeled, influential person, it all came across as mere conjecture. So, I reached out to a top executive Leica Camera AG and here (to paraphrase) is the essence of his gracious reply:

“These cameras were assembled from existing spare parts by three master technicians in the service department. I contacted one of them who was involved in the project, and he told me the cameras were not built at the specific request of a dealer but were offered proactively by Leica. Incidentally, the same thing was done with Leicaflex SL2 MOT cameras that were assembled after production had officially ceased.”

Leitz Photographica Auction page showing top view of Leica M5 chrome No.1918020 made in 1992.....png
Top view of Leica M5 chrome No.1918020 made in 1992 and sold at Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37.

This is great information and much appreciated, but it doesn’t indicate how Leica offered these cameras, who purchased them, at what price, and where they were shipped to. The only was such questions can be answered is by contacting the Leica Archives in Wetzlar, assuming of course that this information was recorded and is still accessible.
 
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FWIW well after the Morris Minor car was out of production I remember a news story about someone who wanted a new one. He actually had one built from parts as everything was available new, despite the production have ceased years before. The downside was the cost of doing so which, if I remember correctly, was several times the inflation adjusted price of the car new. I wonder how many cameras could be assembled from existant parts today and at what cost?
A few years back, Max BMW in New York assembled a “1976” BMW R90S from spare parts. Cost may not have been much different than currently for a well-preserved original model!
 
The Leica M5 I first used as a teenager. In 2010 I bought a chrome M5 and used it a lot. The two lug does not swing when it hangs down. The right end (advance and shutter release end) clear of the third lug addition, or any small lug or strap, made for great right hand contact with the camera. In chrome its brutalist lines are more evident. It was made for fast 50s, or heavy 50s, but in 2011 I went on holiday with the VC 25 f4 and Zeiss finder. I got a few odd looks, and no questions. With wider lenses it was easier to level the M5 and feel the film plane to keep it parallel to building facades. The sound and feel of the moving meter arm add to the unfamiliarity for more delicate M users, but the M5 was a great camera and still is. Mine has the DR Summicron on it. Magnificent machine.
I shot with an M5 for over 4 months but never owned one. Initially I was put off by the size, weight, and control placement, but once I got used to it I was impressed by its picture taking performance and feature set. In retrospect, I think it's a fine, very well made camera and reasonably attractive to boot, but it's a bit too ponderous for my taste.
My 3 favorite Leicas ( in no particular order) are the single-stroke M3, the M2, and the Leica I (Model A) all of which are elegant. In short, while I have great respect and admiration for the Leica M5, believe it deserved a better fate, and can understand why you call it "great" and "magnificent," IMHO, elegant it is not.
 
Congratulations on your masterful "damning with faint praise." I agree that the Leica CL "wasn't exactly bad," but I'm a big fan of the Minolta CLE (despite its flaws) and I still think it "shoulda been a Leica."
Heh. Meant more in an English understatement kind of way. I really liked my CL and always thought that it's big brother was the only thing I'd have liked better.
 
... Except for the current Leica M6 that was re-introduced 2022 (it’s largely based on the currect Leica MP) Leica has never resurrected a discontinued model— ...
The M4 was discontinued in 1971 and reintroduced in 1974 and were for a short time produced alongside the M5 and continued for about a year after it (the M5) was discontinued.
 
The Mysterious Leica M5 of 1992: We now know more, but not all!

Wetzlar made 20 M5s 17 years after it ceased production, but why?

By Jason Schneider

Leica cameras are renowned for their superb construction, gorgeous finish, optical excellence, and (mostly) elegant form factors. But they also enjoy another less obvious distinction—many Leica models had very long production runs because they continued to sell reasonably well years, or even decades, after they were first announced. Notable examples include the Spartan rangefinder-less Leica Standard (Model E) which debuted in 1932 and was listed in the catalog until 1950; the landmark Leica M3 of 1954 to 1967 (over 220,000 units were made!); the first cast alloy bodied Leica, the IIIc of 1940 to 1951, and the best-selling Leica M6 of 1984 to 1998.

Except for the current Leica M6 that was re-introduced 2022 (it’s largely based on the currect Leica MP) Leica has never resurrected a discontinued model—unless you count the 20 mysterious Leica M5s that were assembled in 1992, 17 years after a total of 33,900 Leica M5 cameras (10,750 in silver, 23,150 in black chrome and including 1.750 50th Anniversary Jubilee models) were assembled between the official production dates of 1971 to 1975. Why did they do it? Read on.

View attachment 4875274

The Leica M5 (drawing) with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux: Yes, it's big, heavy, and not as pretty as a Leica M3, but do you really think it's plug ugly? Not I, said the fly!

A brief overview of the ill-fated Leica M5

The M5 thar debuted in 1971 was the first rangefinder Leica with coupled, TTL, match-needle, selective area (semi-spot) metering, the first M to display selected shutter speeds in the finder, and the first and only Leica that let you set intermediate shutter speeds between ½ and 1/1000 sec. It was also the last Leica M to offer a mechanical self-timer, and the last “bench assembled” Leica M with fully adjustable range/viewfinder calibration. Like the M4, the M5 has a 0.72x viewfinder with projected, parallax-compensating, auto-indexing frame lines for 35, 50, 90, and 135mm lenses, but it also employs an ingenious semaphore-mounted CdS cell that moves into position behind the lens for metering and swings out of the way just before the shutter fires. Finally, it has the largest shutter-speed dial of any Leica, conveniently overhanging the camera front, and an improved quick-loading system. Regrettably, despite its technological prowess, the Leica M5 was a colossal marketing disaster, and its poor sales almost sank the M system. Leica fans rejected it largely because it didn’t look or feel like their beloved Leica Ms. Its die-cast body was too large and heavy, it originally came with 2 side-mounted neck strap lugs for a vertical-only hang (though a third was quickly added in response to vociferous complaints), and they detested its inelegant “industrial” from factor, particularly when compared to the classic M3, M2 and M4.

View attachment 4875275

Black Leica M5 standard issue with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux lens in chrome. Leica aficionados loved to hate it when it was announced, but not anymore. It's a formidable picture taker!

By the time Leitz released an unanticipated and largely unannounced batch of 20 new chrome M5s in 1992, the fury over its un-Leica-like form factor had mostly subsided and its enduring virtues as a shooter’s camera (as reflected in moderately increasing prices for used M5s) were finally appreciated. However, that doesn’t fully explain why Leitz would go to the trouble of making them. One possible answer is money. In the early 1990s Leica was in a precarious financial state due to declining sales and strategic missteps such as failing to effectively respond to its Japanese competitors. While the sale of 20 M5’s alone wouldn’t solve all the company’s fiscal woes, it could well have been a case of “every little bit helps.”

View attachment 4875276
Leica M5 page from Leica-Wiki includes with serial number range of 20 made in 1992--see line above Total at bottom of numerical listing.

What are the exact serial numbers and dates of this alleged run of Leica M5s turned out in Wetzlar in 1992—a “fact” seriously questioned by many leading Leica authorities in the U.S. and Europe? According to the production stats posted on Leica-Wiki (included here) the “total assigned serial numbers” bottom line shows that 33.420 M5s were made between 1971 and 1992. However, the line just above the total reads “1918001 1918020 Leica M5 Hell 1992 20,” indicating the serial number range of a batch of 20 silver finished (Hell in German) Leca M5 cameras that were turned out in 1992. While most Leica historians do not credit Leica-Wiki to with being a dispositive source of information, they are generally correct, and they seem to be in target in this case. How do we know?

For starters, a recent eBay listing shows a clean Leica M5 body in chrome, serial No. 1918015, that was allegedly manufactured in 1992 and bears an appropriate serial number in the range posted on Leica-Wiki The asking price: a paltry $1,888.00, only a tad more than the average selling price of a standard issue used M5. Apparently, the same camera was offered at around $3,000 on an eBay auction in Europe, so the actual selling price (if any) of this camera is unknown. Further research turned up another 1992 Leica M5, serial No.1918020, that was sold at Leitz Photographica Auction number 37 held on November 21, 2020, for the hefty sum of 7,200 Euros (then equivalent to a staggering $8,222.40). These guys don’t mess around, so we’re confident that this provenance is correct. And it’s highly unlikely that both these cameras are imposters.

View attachment 4875277
A 1992 Leica M5? Yes, the serial numer is in the proper range and the engraving looks original. Asking price on eBay was a steal at $1,888.00!

View attachment 4875278
Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37 page showing Leica M5, serial No. 1918020 made in 1992 sold for 7,200 Euros on Nov. 21, 2020!



So how did a score of “post-production” Leica M5s come into existence? According to the scuttlebutt among serious Japanese and European Leica collectors who were in the know about this mysteriously unannounced batch of Leica M5s, they were assembled at the request of some well-connected Japanese dealer who paid cash in advance. However, since nobody could identify this well-heeled, influential person, it all came across as mere conjecture. So, I reached out to a top executive Leica Camera AG and here (to paraphrase) is the essence of his gracious reply:

“These cameras were assembled from existing spare parts by three master technicians in the service department. I contacted one of them who was involved in the project, and he told me the cameras were not built at the specific request of a dealer but were offered proactively by Leica. Incidentally, the same thing was done with Leicaflex SL2 MOT cameras that were assembled after production had officially ceased.”

View attachment 4875279
Top view of Leica M5 chrome No.1918020 made in 1992 and sold at Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37.

This is great information and much appreciated, but it doesn’t indicate how Leica offered these cameras, who purchased them, at what price, and where they were shipped to. The only was such questions can be answered is by contacting the Leica Archives in Wetzlar, assuming of course that this information was recorded and is still accessible.

Great read, thanks!

I was but a mere teen with a Nikon F when the M5 came out and I so, so, SO wanted one, but there was no chance I'd ever be able to afford it. With the benefit of 50 years time and lots of hard earned cash stashed away, I was able to get a 50 Jahre "Jubliee" model a few years ago and had DAG overhaul it. It's just a joy to use and shoot, especially since I have now fulfilled my 50 year bucket list...
 
The Mysterious Leica M5 of 1992: We now know more, but not all!

Wetzlar made 20 M5s 17 years after it ceased production, but why?

By Jason Schneider

Leica cameras are renowned for their superb construction, gorgeous finish, optical excellence, and (mostly) elegant form factors. But they also enjoy another less obvious distinction—many Leica models had very long production runs because they continued to sell reasonably well years, or even decades, after they were first announced. Notable examples include the Spartan rangefinder-less Leica Standard (Model E) which debuted in 1932 and was listed in the catalog until 1950; the landmark Leica M3 of 1954 to 1967 (over 220,000 units were made!); the first cast alloy bodied Leica, the IIIc of 1940 to 1951, and the best-selling Leica M6 of 1984 to 1998.

Except for the current Leica M6 that was re-introduced 2022 (it’s largely based on the currect Leica MP) Leica has never resurrected a discontinued model—unless you count the 20 mysterious Leica M5s that were assembled in 1992, 17 years after a total of 33,900 Leica M5 cameras (10,750 in silver, 23,150 in black chrome and including 1.750 50th Anniversary Jubilee models) were assembled between the official production dates of 1971 to 1975. Why did they do it? Read on.

View attachment 4875274

The Leica M5 (drawing) with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux: Yes, it's big, heavy, and not as pretty as a Leica M3, but do you really think it's plug ugly? Not I, said the fly!

A brief overview of the ill-fated Leica M5

The M5 thar debuted in 1971 was the first rangefinder Leica with coupled, TTL, match-needle, selective area (semi-spot) metering, the first M to display selected shutter speeds in the finder, and the first and only Leica that let you set intermediate shutter speeds between ½ and 1/1000 sec. It was also the last Leica M to offer a mechanical self-timer, and the last “bench assembled” Leica M with fully adjustable range/viewfinder calibration. Like the M4, the M5 has a 0.72x viewfinder with projected, parallax-compensating, auto-indexing frame lines for 35, 50, 90, and 135mm lenses, but it also employs an ingenious semaphore-mounted CdS cell that moves into position behind the lens for metering and swings out of the way just before the shutter fires. Finally, it has the largest shutter-speed dial of any Leica, conveniently overhanging the camera front, and an improved quick-loading system. Regrettably, despite its technological prowess, the Leica M5 was a colossal marketing disaster, and its poor sales almost sank the M system. Leica fans rejected it largely because it didn’t look or feel like their beloved Leica Ms. Its die-cast body was too large and heavy, it originally came with 2 side-mounted neck strap lugs for a vertical-only hang (though a third was quickly added in response to vociferous complaints), and they detested its inelegant “industrial” from factor, particularly when compared to the classic M3, M2 and M4.

View attachment 4875275

Black Leica M5 standard issue with 50mm f/1.4 Summilux lens in chrome. Leica aficionados loved to hate it when it was announced, but not anymore. It's a formidable picture taker!

By the time Leitz released an unanticipated and largely unannounced batch of 20 new chrome M5s in 1992, the fury over its un-Leica-like form factor had mostly subsided and its enduring virtues as a shooter’s camera (as reflected in moderately increasing prices for used M5s) were finally appreciated. However, that doesn’t fully explain why Leitz would go to the trouble of making them. One possible answer is money. In the early 1990s Leica was in a precarious financial state due to declining sales and strategic missteps such as failing to effectively respond to its Japanese competitors. While the sale of 20 M5’s alone wouldn’t solve all the company’s fiscal woes, it could well have been a case of “every little bit helps.”

View attachment 4875276
Leica M5 page from Leica-Wiki includes with serial number range of 20 made in 1992--see line above Total at bottom of numerical listing.

What are the exact serial numbers and dates of this alleged run of Leica M5s turned out in Wetzlar in 1992—a “fact” seriously questioned by many leading Leica authorities in the U.S. and Europe? According to the production stats posted on Leica-Wiki (included here) the “total assigned serial numbers” bottom line shows that 33.420 M5s were made between 1971 and 1992. However, the line just above the total reads “1918001 1918020 Leica M5 Hell 1992 20,” indicating the serial number range of a batch of 20 silver finished (Hell in German) Leca M5 cameras that were turned out in 1992. While most Leica historians do not credit Leica-Wiki to with being a dispositive source of information, they are generally correct, and they seem to be in target in this case. How do we know?

For starters, a recent eBay listing shows a clean Leica M5 body in chrome, serial No. 1918015, that was allegedly manufactured in 1992 and bears an appropriate serial number in the range posted on Leica-Wiki The asking price: a paltry $1,888.00, only a tad more than the average selling price of a standard issue used M5. Apparently, the same camera was offered at around $3,000 on an eBay auction in Europe, so the actual selling price (if any) of this camera is unknown. Further research turned up another 1992 Leica M5, serial No.1918020, that was sold at Leitz Photographica Auction number 37 held on November 21, 2020, for the hefty sum of 7,200 Euros (then equivalent to a staggering $8,222.40). These guys don’t mess around, so we’re confident that this provenance is correct. And it’s highly unlikely that both these cameras are imposters.

View attachment 4875277
A 1992 Leica M5? Yes, the serial numer is in the proper range and the engraving looks original. Asking price on eBay was a steal at $1,888.00!

View attachment 4875278
Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37 page showing Leica M5, serial No. 1918020 made in 1992 sold for 7,200 Euros on Nov. 21, 2020!



So how did a score of “post-production” Leica M5s come into existence? According to the scuttlebutt among serious Japanese and European Leica collectors who were in the know about this mysteriously unannounced batch of Leica M5s, they were assembled at the request of some well-connected Japanese dealer who paid cash in advance. However, since nobody could identify this well-heeled, influential person, it all came across as mere conjecture. So, I reached out to a top executive Leica Camera AG and here (to paraphrase) is the essence of his gracious reply:

“These cameras were assembled from existing spare parts by three master technicians in the service department. I contacted one of them who was involved in the project, and he told me the cameras were not built at the specific request of a dealer but were offered proactively by Leica. Incidentally, the same thing was done with Leicaflex SL2 MOT cameras that were assembled after production had officially ceased.”

View attachment 4875279
Top view of Leica M5 chrome No.1918020 made in 1992 and sold at Leitz Photographica Auction No. 37.

This is great information and much appreciated, but it doesn’t indicate how Leica offered these cameras, who purchased them, at what price, and where they were shipped to. The only was such questions can be answered is by contacting the Leica Archives in Wetzlar, assuming of course that this information was recorded and is still accessible.
Beyond why they would make more of these, It would be interesting to know where this batch went after such a limited production. Factory records, invoices, receipts, correspondence - anything to track them. Harder would be to work backwards from where each one is now. A great mystery. Perhaps the Leica executive you spoke with may know more. Perhaps. Still can't help thinking that the where they went helps explain the why they were made.
 
The M4 was discontinued in 1971 and reintroduced in 1974 and were for a short time produced alongside the M5 and continued for about a year after it (the M5) was discontinued.


According to Leica-Wiki there was indeed a gap between the last 500 black lacquered M4s produced in 1971 and the first 400 (unspecified) black M4s produced in 1974, but there were also 505 black KE-7A cameras made in 1972 and these are usually described as “military versions of the Leica M4.” There is also one batch of 1600 and another batch of 800 M4s (50+J-ELC) with no assigned year of production, and a total of 2820 M4s made in 1975. In short, while you are technically correct that the standard issue M4 was discontinued for a few years, this is situation is not comparable to the 17-year hiatus for the M5 or the reintroduction of the M6.
 
I recall reading somewhere that Nikon was willing to assemble new SPs from parts stocks well into the 1970s for "special" customers, e.g. big-name photojournalists, and I'll bet other companies would have been willing to do likewise if demand existed and the parts were there. Likely criteria for this sort of resurrection would be design longevity ("our current model still uses exactly the same marzel vanes") and management continuity (the company was never disbanded, reorganized following bankruptcy, or sold to asset strippers) meaning, unfortunately, that very few grand old names would have the capability to pull this off today -- so my daydreams of phoenix-like Minoltas, Mamiyas, and Canon rangefinders will have to remain fantasies...
 
... In short, while you are technically correct that the standard issue M4 was discontinued for a few years, this is situation is not comparable to the 17-year hiatus for the M5 or the reintroduction of the M6.
I don't think there has been any comparable situation to the 20 M5 cameras produced in 1992. The M5 was never reintroduced into the catalogue, nor were they special editions. Leica simply produced them, offered them to dealers, and they were gone.
 
I don't think there has been any comparable situation to the 20 M5 cameras produced in 1992. The M5 was never reintroduced into the catalogue, nor were they special editions. Leica simply produced them, offered them to dealers, and they were gone.
I agree with all your points except for the last one. At this point, we simply don't know exactly how Leica promoted or announced the 20 chrome Leica M5 cameras they produced in 1992, to whom they were made available, or what the asking price was. Presumably all these facts will emerge in the fullness of time if the official production and shipping records are available.
 
Another thing about the M5 is I reckon I can handhold slower with this camera. Leica Ms with chrome lenses are pretty heavy. That mass is easier to keep still. There's more of your right hand on an M5 two lug, more camera to anchor to your forehead. It was with the M5 and C Sonnar that I caught my good friend giving a university lecture, one good shot on half a roll at 1s and f1.5 on slow film, unsuited to the task. Even just switching between Ms, the different feel of each, is a great stabiliser, like swapping between different Pelikan fountain pens, and EF and F nibs. The hands are slightly father apart with the M5, quelling tremor, resting muscles with the slightly different posture. Painters have this with different brushes.
 
Well, I didn't like the M5 in the 1970s and I still don't so I am not excited about 20 new ones. My M3-MOT and my M4-P are all I need.


I have a IIIf, M2, M4, and M5. All have been serviced and tuned within the last several years. The Ms are more alike than different. The M5 is innovative in so many really nifty ways. I recently had cause to pick up a just-serviced M4-P. The tactile difference during film advance was noticeable. The truth is that there are no bad Leica bodies if they are properly maintained.
 
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The thing about collectables that I can't completely connect with: They don't do much beyond some novel quality or history. So the motivation for making this small batch of 20 "newer" M5s is somewhat mysterious ....OK. Interesting. But there is nothing else distinctive about these cameras other than perhaps they were made from leftover parts....meh. But to drop ~ $5000 on a camera that either sits on shelf or gets used like any other M5 makes no sense to me. Unless you want to flip it as in flipping a house. Buy low(er), Sell high.

Darth Vader's light saber sold at auction this past Thursday in Los Angeles for $3.6 Million. I got outbid, haha. Seriously though, what would you do with it? Boast that you have it and show it at your next barbecue or cocktail party? Display it prominently in your home? Just hold and admire it as a famous prop from a famous movie? Buy insurance for it?
 
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