Landberg
Well-known
Always M5! best camera ever made!
The CLE is a very elegant camera and one of the best film platforms for wideangle lenses. It's also the only RF where you can buy a TTL flash for under $20 (a Vivitar 550FD). I think the shutter speed contacts can get dirty, which is why people freak about "malfunctions," but actually using the camera keeps things sorted. It's hard to appreciate just how compact it is; even some Canonets are bigger!
That said, I have been debating selling mine - the Monochrom 246 has kind of ruined 35mm b/w film photography for me...
D
I have owned almost any rangefinder you can think of and imho the cle is the best camera that Leica never made.
Pictures with the 40mm Rokkor give you the idea there is nothing left to wish for.
Regards,
Frank
For the prices I'm seeing, the M6 is a whole lot more expensive than the M5. The price difference between the M5 and CLE that I'm seeing here in Hong Kong is about 100 USD. The criteria my friends were considering - well basically had told them that I wanted to get started in film using a with a RF camera, and start off cheap. I would say that the price heavily impacted my (and their) opinion(s). Having heard people's opinions and gathering more info and knowledge about lenses (and their prices), I'm swaying more towards the CLE now..
The 40mm f1.4 Voigt. Nokton is a VERY nice lens - beautifully machined and ergonomically pretty much perfect in use. I have one which I use as a 'standard' lens on my M8.2 (53mm effective focal length with the 1.33 crop factor). For my photo needs I honestly can't fault it at all....What do you think of the Voigtlander Nokton 40mm 1.4 lens?
The 40mm f1.4 Voigt. Nokton is a VERY nice lens - beautifully machined and ergonomically pretty much perfect in use. I have one which I use as a 'standard' lens on my M8.2 (53mm effective focal length with the 1.33 crop factor). For my photo needs I honestly can't fault it at all.
Here is a pretty straightforward (if slightly sarcastic) review of it. Ignore the stuff about how it's a queer length for a Leica and so on as it doesn't apply (obviously) for the CLE;
http://www.kenrockwell.com/voigtlander/40mm-f14.htm
The only small caveat I'd add is that with both a filter and generic vented hood fitted there is the possibility of image cut-off / vignetting in the extreme corners at smaller apertures on a full-frame camera - depending on filter-ring thickness and which exact generic hood you might buy. I only noticed it after I started using it so equipped on my M9-P (full-frame) and then only when I had stopped-down to f11 / f16. Voigtlander do make a dedicated hood for it, however, the LH-6. Whether the corner cut-off manifests itself as a problem shooting film is another question...
Pip.
Perhaps I didn't make myself perfectly clear....I've not noticed any vignetting with a standard UV filter. I haven't felt the need to try a hood. From what I can see it's probably not required. It's plenty sharp, slightly soft and glow at 1.4 but entirely usable. I'd not use it wide open for landscape use but for low light , portraits etc it perfectly adequate. The focus tab does take some time to get used to and is the only thing I don't like.
Now I understand, thank you.
By the way, the way to start off without spending a lot of money on a film RF is to buy an Olympus XA or similar; the Konica C35 is high on my list but you don't get interchangeable lenses with either...
No worries, ACullen. Glad I had the chance to clarify my earlier post.Apologies to pippy-I misread your original post.
The SC and Classic versions of this lens only differ in coatings. Most reports suggest fairly minimal real world differences in shooting