BobYIL
Well-known
[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]Around $200M revenue ( that's Leica AG's camera and lens sales only) may not mean much for some giants like Canon or Nikon to introduce a FF or APS-C size rangefinder/mirrorless with a few AF lenses to accompany. To amortize investment costs they can never introduce one with M-mount. Not even for Fujifilm..
However half of this turnover could easily be feasible amount for a joint venture between Zeiss & Cosina to introduce the digital ZM. The Fuji X-Pro1 and M9 "controversy" have indicated that the rangefinder/mirrorless users are after to have either a fast and reliable AF body with native AF lenses or one with classical rangefinder and M-mount manual focus lenses.
Bear in mind that the monthly production quota of Leica M9 is not even 2.000 pieces while Leica still claiming that they hardly cope up with demand. I doubt it... the initial tide is over, there is no more waiting lines for a $7K body. The waiting lines now shifted to another camera being produced 30.000 pieces a month.
However this brings a question to mind: Is the need for a real digital rangefinder is only 2.000 units a month? How about the sales figures if some company comes up with a similar product to offer for less than the half of the M9; say $2.500 - 3.000? Would it not sell as much as the M9 at least? Would it not "steal" a hefty slice out of Leica's cake? Sometimes the end user cost determines the sales figures.
I think the closest company to such a "dream" is the Zeiss/Cosina; for they have the rangefinder as ready, needing only the body to be modified to digital (even the shutter is close in construction to the one used on the M9) while having an array of lenses similar to what Leica do and with more reasonable prices. A 24MP CMOS (!) sensor of the late Sony offering with usable ISO 6400 could well be a fine alternative to satisfy almost any expectation like the M9 does + some more! . With such a reasonable body cost I tend to believe it may sell as much as the X-Pro1 and definitely more than the M9. And who wants to stick to the best Leica lenses can still do it by not needing to invest on a Leica body.
Add to these also the Liveview and using any SLR lenses via adapters too. Even the HD video since all new Fujitsu processor engines come automatically with video even for bodies costing couple of hundreds only.
Just my two cents...
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However half of this turnover could easily be feasible amount for a joint venture between Zeiss & Cosina to introduce the digital ZM. The Fuji X-Pro1 and M9 "controversy" have indicated that the rangefinder/mirrorless users are after to have either a fast and reliable AF body with native AF lenses or one with classical rangefinder and M-mount manual focus lenses.
Bear in mind that the monthly production quota of Leica M9 is not even 2.000 pieces while Leica still claiming that they hardly cope up with demand. I doubt it... the initial tide is over, there is no more waiting lines for a $7K body. The waiting lines now shifted to another camera being produced 30.000 pieces a month.
However this brings a question to mind: Is the need for a real digital rangefinder is only 2.000 units a month? How about the sales figures if some company comes up with a similar product to offer for less than the half of the M9; say $2.500 - 3.000? Would it not sell as much as the M9 at least? Would it not "steal" a hefty slice out of Leica's cake? Sometimes the end user cost determines the sales figures.
I think the closest company to such a "dream" is the Zeiss/Cosina; for they have the rangefinder as ready, needing only the body to be modified to digital (even the shutter is close in construction to the one used on the M9) while having an array of lenses similar to what Leica do and with more reasonable prices. A 24MP CMOS (!) sensor of the late Sony offering with usable ISO 6400 could well be a fine alternative to satisfy almost any expectation like the M9 does + some more! . With such a reasonable body cost I tend to believe it may sell as much as the X-Pro1 and definitely more than the M9. And who wants to stick to the best Leica lenses can still do it by not needing to invest on a Leica body.
Add to these also the Liveview and using any SLR lenses via adapters too. Even the HD video since all new Fujitsu processor engines come automatically with video even for bodies costing couple of hundreds only.
Just my two cents...
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