noimmunity
scratch my niche
'Oh just wait for the M11, then the prices really will come down'?
I'm waiting for the M&M, a dual film/digital body that comes with all new, vibrant colors
'Oh just wait for the M11, then the prices really will come down'?
Jon, I know where you are coming from. Last year I drowned my M6ttl whilst crossing a flooded river in New Zealand right at the start of a 13 day hike. The only solace I could take was from it all... at least it wasn't an M9. I love film but I've finally decided to bite the bullet and take a small digital camera (a GF1 with the new pancake zoom). Plus an M body, a couple of lenses and a bag of film would weigh at least twice as much as the GF1. If you go the Nex route let us know how it works out. Cheers, Alan
I'm waiting for the M&M, a dual film/digital body that comes with all new, vibrant colors
The remedy is called insurance.. . 🙄
I have been skiing with the M9, dragged it through little-travelled parts of Africa, covered it with dust in dry semi-desert, nearly drowned it with a sudden storm on an open boat, and I am of again into Manda Wilderness in Mozambique and Katavi and the Mahale Mountains in Tanzania tomorrow. Looking forward to using my newly acquired Super Elmar 18 for landscapes and reportage. 🙂 It has never failed me. It is a tough tool, built for traipsing through the wilderness as you put it. A backpacking hike appears to me to be rather mild use, suitable even for cameras that have become habituated to be treated as precious ornaments..,😛
I'm beginning to think that it would make a lot more $en$e to keep the M8, for my RF fix, complementing it with something like a Nex or a GXR for excellent high ISO as well as a body that would be great for use in the backcountry.
The M9 doesn't need to get babied... but your plan above sounds fine. It's the cheaper alternative that still allows you to enjoy photography & capture great images.
I did 6 straight days of mountain biking in The high mountains of Colorado with my M8.2 in my camelback. I crashed hard enough to severely sprain my ankle on the last day but the camera made it through without issue. From rain and near freezing temps at 12,000 feet down a mountain side to 60f and sunny, the camera performed without issue. If I had had my M9 then, it would have been on my bag.
Time and the onward march of technology will allow for an M9 quality image in a small package, at a much reduced price. The question is, are you willing to wait and must it be a true full-frame rangefinder?
I think a cheaper FF RF is a pipe dream. Not that it couldn't be done, just that no one will put in the R&D money for a very niche market, and cheaper could be relative.
We still see the corner issues that come from having the rear element so close to the sensor with a 1.5x sensor in the NEX-7 - the microlenses that adapt to accept M-mount wide angles on the M9 are a nice piece of engineering and barring a leap in sensor technology, probably not something that can be done away with.
Leica will remain the only game in town for digital rangefinders, and they will continue to charge whatever they can get for bodies, preferring high-margin and low-volume to the opposite.
I did 6 straight days of mountain biking in The high mountains of Colorado with my M8.2 in my camelback. I crashed hard enough to severely sprain my ankle on the last day but the camera made it through without issue. From rain and near freezing temps at 12,000 feet down a mountain side to 60f and sunny, the camera performed without issue. If I had had my M9 then, it would have been on my bag.