M3 Loading System

borismach

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Dear all,

I'm now using a M6 Classic and want to add an M3.

One thing bothers me is the film loading system of M3. I've toyed with 2 M3 at local shops. Both didn't have the qick load system. I worry that the film loading process would be very painful and kill my desire in shooting with M3. Any users' comment on their experience in film loading an M3?

I really want to hear your advice before go for such an investment.

Thanks a million.

BM
 
Hello BM,

My experiences are very similar to yours. I started with an M6 and later added an M3. I have not found the M3 to be difficult to load film. Best done when you have a flat surface to work on since you have to pull the takeup spool out, then insert the film end under the spring steel flap on the spool, then slide both the film cassette and spool into the M3. But I have not found the process particularly difficult. To put it simply, this would not be a reason for me to avoid the M3. Oh, and you can also buy extra spools and then set them up with film cassettes for quick insertion into the M3 if you ever want more quick re-loading while out shooting.

-Randy
 
Hi BM,

It depends how important the loading speed is to you I guess. When I first loaded an m2 it didn't strike me that it was that hard ... just fiddly and not quick like my M7! There are certain curcumstances where it could be tricky I guess ... ie ..... being jostled around in a moving vehicle or similar. It's not an issue for me though! 🙂
 
Same here. I was somewaht perplexed the first time I used my M3 but once I understood it no big deal.

Where can I get extra spools. That is a handy idea.
 
Best light...

Best light...

Hello:

I have found that the best light and most interesting action occurs while i'm loading a M3.

M3s are not hard to load, a lens wrap etc. as a clean surface for the base is a good idea.

yours
Frank
'Best for the Holidays
 
I've been using the M3 since around 1967 or 68 and don't find it difficult to load. As others have said buy a couple of take-up spools and set them up with film so you can simply drop them in.

Around 15 years ago I purchased a quick load system for this camera and used it maybe 2 or 3 times before selling it. It did not impress me in the least.
 
The M3 quick load kit isn't much of an improvement over the standard loading mechanism IMHO. If you have big hands or less than a deft touch with fumbly things, both can be annoying.

It helps if you can find one of the Leitz film leader trimming templates. (Sorry that I don't have the Leitz part number.)

I have one of these thingies that allows me and an Xacto knife to create the long, thin film leaders that all film once had and that makes film loading in Leicas the way that it was meant to be.

Another solution if you are in love with your M3 and want to throw some $$$ at the problem is to send it to DAG and have Don put the M4 (and later) film take-up system in the camera. This does way with the removable spool and loading becomes like the later model Leicas. My super-hybrid M3 Mk. 2/4 has had this mod (along with countless others).
 
There is absolutely no need to trim the film leader for loading the M3 or M2, only for the thread mount ("Barnack") Leicas (& even then, you can load without trimming if you're careful).

AusDLK said:
The M3 quick load kit isn't much of an improvement over the standard loading mechanism IMHO. If you have big hands or less than a deft touch with fumbly things, both can be annoying.

It helps if you can find one of the Leitz film leader trimming templates. (Sorry that I don't have the Leitz part number.)

I have one of these thingies that allows me and an Xacto knife to create the long, thin film leaders that all film once had and that makes film loading in Leicas the way that it was meant to be.
 
About a year after I bought my M2, I had the quick load kit installed. That was 1968, I remember liking it then, and I've never been tempted to remove it. OTOH, that's so long ago I don't recall how terrible the loading was without the kit! 😀
 
Dougg said:
About a year after I bought my M2, I had the quick load kit installed. That was 1968, I remember liking it then, and I've never been tempted to remove it. OTOH, that's so long ago I don't recall how terrible the loading was without the kit! 😀

One thing I do remember about 1968 was how cheap the M3's and M2's had gotten because everybody was trading them up to the M4.

I bought my first M3 with f/2.8 Elmar for $65 with money I had saved from my after school job.
Still have the body but traded the lens long ago..
 
>There is absolutely no need to trim the film leader for loading the M3 or M2,

I agree that it is not necessary -- but it does make loading easier in my opinion. After all, the film loading of the early M cameras was designed for the film that was available at the time -- not the shortened leader film we have nowadays.
 
You should be able to find a conversion kit to eliminte the old-fashioned spool and make the camera function more like the fast loading system used on more recent bodies. I found one for my M2, and it made using the M2 as easy as using an M4-2 and M-6.
 
I like loading my Canon, it's a whole lot faster than the M3. Also, once I got too confident in my loading skill, just wound the leader onto the spool and clicked once then closed the door and proceeded to play 'pretend photographer' for 40 shots, on a 36 exp roll of film, until I realized something was up. Now I always check to make completely sure it's on the spool.

I dropped the bottom plate once, and the side that hooks onto the body on the right got bent so I have to push harder to get it on and off now.
 
back alley said:
how do you guys find loading in a darkened room?

i liked my m3 till i had to load film quickly and in the dark.

joe
Bingo! That is a pain. I ended up scraping some of the black paint off the front of the spring so I could see it better in the dark.

Yes the M3 is usually a bit slower to load, but I've found it's more reliable. I've never had a mis-load with my M2 (same loading as the M3), I've had a few with my M6. I know you are supposed to just stick the film into the prongs, attach the bottom and forget about it, but hard experience has taught me to always tension the rewind knob before starting to shoot. On the M6, if the film hasn't caught, it just winds all the way back into the cassette without any warning whereas on my M2 there's a definite increase in tension when the film disengages from the spool, and I can stop before the film rewinds all the way. I don't totally trust the M6's loading system.

A few people have said that it's best to load an M3/2 on a flat surface, but I've found there's no advantage if you have a neck-strap. Just hang the camera upside-down (lens against your chest), and it'll stay that way while you reload, no problem. stick the base-plate in your pocket, and flip open the back door, and it's as good as a table. I do tend to worry about dropping the spool into some impossible to retrieve place though.

Although there is no need to trim the leader at all with an M Leica, I do find that trimming the leader back a few inches (as you would for a thread-mount Leica) makes the loading a little easier as there are only one set of sprocket holes that can get caught up in the sprocket teeth.

Bottom-loading, I guess it makes the camera more ridged and all of that, but it's a pain with or without the M6 style loading.
 
I think David describes it very well. I'd add: practice getting the film square on the take up reel, always check that the film's engaged one of the sprocket teeth and always check the rewind spool is turning as you wind.
 
Not hard

Not hard

back alley said:
how do you guys find loading in a darkened room?

i liked my m3 till i had to load film quickly and in the dark.

joe


I find it easier to load in the dark than my M6, because there is more tactile feedback and a firmer endpoint.

Practice in a darkroom tent, no eyes. Feed the film into the spool - you will feel when it is in! Better than with the M6 anyway. Drop it in, feel how the teeth engage - done.

Sometimes I wish the M6 had the same mechanism.

Invest 1 hour changing film in the darkroom tent, a worthwhile time investment. It will be easy from than on.

I can load film in the M3 walking without even thinking about it.


😉
Andreas
 
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