The Results are In
The Results are In
I received today my lenses back from Leica. The lenses have now the much ballyhooed 6-bit coding (see photo below) that lured me into this personal catastrophe--which is what prompted me to start this thread. I am quite pleased with the work they did. I'm less pleased with the hit on my credit card. The final cost was €959.85 ($1,271.53), per the estimate. Had it been half that cost, I would be much happier. I hope after the credit card is paid and I've forgotten the sting of it, I will focus on the pleasure I get from the results of the lenses and not the cost of all of this.
Before I sent the lenses to Leica in Solms, there were many specs of something inside the 50mm lens. It didn't seem to cause a problem, but there was something in there that glittered. The 90mm lens had some dust or mildew in it--not much, but a little bit. They took the lenses apart and cleaned them. Below is a pair of photos showing how clean they look now. I wish I had taken photos of them before I sent them to Leica so I could show the difference.
As part of the package of adding the lens flanges, they recalibrated the lenses. To try that out, I took photos of a poinsettia plant in my home today to see how well I could focus them. Below is a photo taken with the Leica Summicron-M 50mm. It looks pretty sharp to me. Maybe someone with more experience with this lens and camera could do better--especially someone who doesn't use eye-glasses. I focused on the one large leaf with a reddish hint to it.
The 6-bit coding added not only the name of the model of the lens attached to the camera, but its able to judge the aperture correctly. Before they serviced the lenses, the camera seemed to guess poorly as to the aperture setting. They're manual lenses with no electronic information transmitted to the camera. Somehow by knowing the specific lens and measuring the width of the light coming into the camera--I guess, but don't know--it determines the aperture setting. So instead of recording apertures of f/4.8, f/5.7, f/9.5 and other odd increments, I'm getting now true apertures of f/4, f/5.6, and f/8.
Below is a photo I took with the Leica Elmarit-M 90mm lens. Again, I focused on the one large, reddish leaf. It looks very good to me.
I feel good about my lenses now. I bought them at very low prices. Adding another €480 to the cash I paid for each was not preferred, but the total cost is still much less than I should have paid for each lens in their current condition. So, I guess it's fine. Thanks everyone for your comments, advice, and support. I appreciate it.
-Russell