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So I finally sucummbed and got a Leica.
I knew it was inevidable, after that faithful day when I passed a camera shop and saw, for a first time, a werid looking camera stamped LEICA and M6 and looking like the Olympus OM-10 I was using then for my school's photography club. I was 14 then.
Just a few days ago, my BGN grade Leica IIIc converted to IIIf arrived. It's a early model IIIc, serial number 408666! Talk about unlucky numbers! I have a early model FED 2 as well, with holed curtains, so I decided to do a comparision test.
Both cameras are around the same age, give or take 20 years. No CLA as far as I know has ben done on either of them
Winding.
Both are knob winded. The winding was effortless on the IIIc. In fact, I thought the camera was spoilt, and on the first day of me owning it! The winding on the FED, while not rough, was noticably tougher to wind. Winner = Leica.
Mounting lenses.
I have a Industar 50 coll lens that I nicknamed the dream lens due to the very heavily scratched front element. It still works though, giving dreamy pictures, though I won't blow the pictures up beyond 4R. When I mount this lens on the FED 2, it keeps slipping off and unscrewing when I'm trying to focus the lens. On the IIIc, it screws on and stays there. Winner = Leica.
Shutter speeds.
The IIIc has speeds from 1-1000 plus B and T. The FED has speeds from 30-500 plus B. I usually shoot in low light, so the lack of slow speeds is a killer. Winner = Leica .
Dioper adjustment.
Both have it, though I'm pleasently surprised that a $30 camera comes with this function. Draw.
Meter.
Both features TTE metering, the worlds most accurate metering pattern. Comes in spot, matrix or center weighted, incident or reflective depending on your mood. Draw.
Film rewind.
Both have knob rewinds. I'm not a photojounalist, shooting 10 rolls a day, so I don't think it's slow. Draw.
Now comes the bad part.
Film loading.
The IIIc keeps the awkward bottom loading of it's predecessors, while the FED 2 has a much better loading system, though not as convenient as a swing back. Why couldn't Leica, who was at the forefront of innovation then, have something like that? Winner = FED.
Viewfinder / Rangefinder
The FED 2 features a COMBINED VF/RF while the IIIc has seperate viewfinders for both. While the IIIc rangefinder is larger, and it isn't a problem for me, it's still slower then a combined one. Winner = FED.
Rangefinder baselength.
The FED wins here yet again. Why Leica, why!
And the most damning
Shutter sounds.
To my utmost relief, the IIIc sounds softer then the FED 2, but not by much, around 30-40% only. Considering that this is a $300 camera compared to a $30 camera, it gives one pause. Draw.
In conclusion,
I still prefer the Leica IIIc. The slow speeds, small size plus looks does it for me. But if anyone wants a small accurate rangefinder, a FED 2 would suffice, and at 1/10 the price of a Leica at that!
Samuel
I knew it was inevidable, after that faithful day when I passed a camera shop and saw, for a first time, a werid looking camera stamped LEICA and M6 and looking like the Olympus OM-10 I was using then for my school's photography club. I was 14 then.
Just a few days ago, my BGN grade Leica IIIc converted to IIIf arrived. It's a early model IIIc, serial number 408666! Talk about unlucky numbers! I have a early model FED 2 as well, with holed curtains, so I decided to do a comparision test.
Both cameras are around the same age, give or take 20 years. No CLA as far as I know has ben done on either of them
Winding.
Both are knob winded. The winding was effortless on the IIIc. In fact, I thought the camera was spoilt, and on the first day of me owning it! The winding on the FED, while not rough, was noticably tougher to wind. Winner = Leica.
Mounting lenses.
I have a Industar 50 coll lens that I nicknamed the dream lens due to the very heavily scratched front element. It still works though, giving dreamy pictures, though I won't blow the pictures up beyond 4R. When I mount this lens on the FED 2, it keeps slipping off and unscrewing when I'm trying to focus the lens. On the IIIc, it screws on and stays there. Winner = Leica.
Shutter speeds.
The IIIc has speeds from 1-1000 plus B and T. The FED has speeds from 30-500 plus B. I usually shoot in low light, so the lack of slow speeds is a killer. Winner = Leica .
Dioper adjustment.
Both have it, though I'm pleasently surprised that a $30 camera comes with this function. Draw.
Meter.
Both features TTE metering, the worlds most accurate metering pattern. Comes in spot, matrix or center weighted, incident or reflective depending on your mood. Draw.
Film rewind.
Both have knob rewinds. I'm not a photojounalist, shooting 10 rolls a day, so I don't think it's slow. Draw.
Now comes the bad part.
Film loading.
The IIIc keeps the awkward bottom loading of it's predecessors, while the FED 2 has a much better loading system, though not as convenient as a swing back. Why couldn't Leica, who was at the forefront of innovation then, have something like that? Winner = FED.
Viewfinder / Rangefinder
The FED 2 features a COMBINED VF/RF while the IIIc has seperate viewfinders for both. While the IIIc rangefinder is larger, and it isn't a problem for me, it's still slower then a combined one. Winner = FED.
Rangefinder baselength.
The FED wins here yet again. Why Leica, why!
And the most damning
Shutter sounds.
To my utmost relief, the IIIc sounds softer then the FED 2, but not by much, around 30-40% only. Considering that this is a $300 camera compared to a $30 camera, it gives one pause. Draw.
In conclusion,
I still prefer the Leica IIIc. The slow speeds, small size plus looks does it for me. But if anyone wants a small accurate rangefinder, a FED 2 would suffice, and at 1/10 the price of a Leica at that!
Samuel