css9450
Veteran
Obviously Leica fashioned the R8 in such a way as to test whether or not the Russians would copy whatever they did, no matter how ugly. Seems their suspicions were right!
The Leica R8 apparently had a ******* child while on vacation in Russia.
Is the 212 a m42 or F mount rig?
Always though those “new” Zenitars had a cool exterior. Very Minolta maxxum of them.
(spoiler alert, the R9/R8 are the best 35mm film SLRs I've ever used, and I have stuff like the F6, F3P and F3Limited, F2AS, Minolta XK, FM2n etc)
Weird. They both look like cameras to me.
(spoiler alert, the R9/R8 are the best 35mm film SLRs I've ever used, and I have stuff like the F6, F3P and F3Limited, F2AS, Minolta XK, FM2n etc)
Larry Cloetta said:I'd have to personally agree with that, and I have owned all those others as well, minus the F3Ltd.
I should use them more, but it's just too easy.
I have to ask, since I've never actually used an R8 (I've probably never even seen one). What are its strong points? Just judging by the photo, it looks like its uncomfortable and awkward to hold. It has the body shape of a modern autofocus SLR or DSLR minus one of its most important features: a right-side handgrip for secure and comfortable handling. But I could be wrong; maybe its bigger or smaller than I imagine it to be and it fits the hand perfectly.
Tell us what you were drinking!
Phil Forrest
I have to ask, since I've never actually used an R8 (I've probably never even seen one). What are its strong points? Just judging by the photo, it looks like its uncomfortable and awkward to hold. It has the body shape of a modern autofocus SLR or DSLR minus one of its most important features: a right-side handgrip for secure and comfortable handling. But I could be wrong; maybe its bigger or smaller than I imagine it to be and it fits the hand perfectly.

Huss, you're a character, and one of my favorite contributors here. In my head for whatever reason, I picture you as voice actor Toby Huss and read your posts in the voice of Cotton from King of the Hill.
truth be told, I actually did buy into Leica while I was slightly intoxicated. Had slowly started moving away from Nikon with a Bessa, inherited a few of my father's old lenses, and on a celebratory night bought my M5 after a few drinks; likewise with my M8. Other than a bit of sticker shock, no regrets. At least upgrading to the Typ 262 was something I'd considered for years.
But congrats on the buy. I've heard good things about those K-mount Zenitars. Back when I was in junior high and in a typical intro photography class, my best friend, who was from Ukraine, used his parents' old Zenit-D. I was always impressed with the rendering of that lens. I should ask him if he still has it.
To Larry—over the years, even as an F6/D2x user, I've also really come to appreciate the R series cameras ergonomically. They certainly are ugly, but there's a lot of beautifully ugly cameras out there, and so many of them came from a start-from-scratch design. The Olympus OM series, with their coaxial shutter dial, and shutter-dial-looking ISO dial. The Pentax MZ-S, which is too strange to describe. the Minolta Maxxum 7, sort of a plastic proto-F6. All of the Yashica/Kyocera Contaxes, with their gorgeous lenses. I really appreciate the care for ergonomics and craftsmanship of all of the above. If I were starting from scratch today, I'd honestly probably buy into the OM system rather than Nikon, and use a mirrorless body for digital. Only reason I stuck with Nikon was inheriting a lot of wonderful old AI-s lenses from a family member, and their digital bodies mounted them. I've since sold or passed forward most of them.
But as a bit of a camera historian I do understand why Nikon and Canon won out over German and the smaller Japanese makes in the mass market. They do everything, and had compatibility across models and target market tiers of cameras, and an extremely simplified interface—some of the Zeiss and other German cameras of the '60s looked completely unchanged from the '30s. When you're buying into a system, it's tempting knowing you can get an intervalometer or data back, buy bellows/macro lenses, or put a 300/2.8 lens on your camera, even if you'll never, ever use them.
About a month ago, I stopped in my local shop (Glazer's, for those folks around Seattle) and the new Leica specialist, after realizing I wasn't budging on an M10 or Q, was really pushing me on taking home the R4 they had in the used gear case. Trust me, it was very tempting. Considering how cheap the lenses are (relatively), and how I really don't use anything beyond centerweighted metering, it still is. As is the two NIB Contax NX's they have from a trade-in.
PS Once I'd given up all idea of a repair I spoke to people at shows with R8's and was shocked....by their weight.