bcostin
Well-known
I think it qualifies as a classic, if any camera made in my lifetime qualifies as such. I bought my M8.2 from the RFF classifieds back in 2018. I don't remember the count when I bought it, but it now has 48,000 actuations and appears to be working just fine. I suppose it'll die some day, but so will I. That's not unique; many all-mechanical cameras are only repairable by cannibalizing spares from a limited pool of donor bodies.
I actually suspect that certain well-loved digital cameras will become more repairable as time goes on. It seems counterintuitive, but it's already happening with early home computers and other consumer electronics which were previously unrepairable. The main hinderance is that most manufacturers (sadly including Leica) hoard support information for long-discontinued cameras like trade secrets, which is foolish and unhelpful. As CHDK and Magic Lantern on Canon digital cameras demonstrate, when companies soften their stance toward community tinkering it allows wonderful things to happen.
I actually suspect that certain well-loved digital cameras will become more repairable as time goes on. It seems counterintuitive, but it's already happening with early home computers and other consumer electronics which were previously unrepairable. The main hinderance is that most manufacturers (sadly including Leica) hoard support information for long-discontinued cameras like trade secrets, which is foolish and unhelpful. As CHDK and Magic Lantern on Canon digital cameras demonstrate, when companies soften their stance toward community tinkering it allows wonderful things to happen.