Olsen
Well-known
All 500 were sold within 2 hours of the announcement.
And how many was bought by the German Government?
All 500 were sold within 2 hours of the announcement.
And how many was bought by the German Government?
All 500 were sold within 2 hours of the announcement.
The value of the dollar has little to do with my disappointment with Leica showing the M9ti at Photokina, the big innovation being LED's to light the framelines. I hope that Leica introduces a hybrid finder with the next real camera that they introduce, rather than this expensive toy. The "Pony in here somewhere" is that Leica will hopefully make at least 100% profit off of these M9ti's, and place some R&D into making the M9-II or M10 finder truly better than what it is now.
As far as the value of the dollar- Gasoline is under $2.50 per gallon here. A Gallon of milk is about the same. I think more people are concerned about everyday expenses rather than $26,000 cameras.
None as far as I was told. Most are going to Asia and the Middle East. I was told "very few are staying in Europe"
This could well be true.
Buyers in Europe, except for pro photographers who run a business, have to pay 25% VAT on top of the 26,000 $ - making the price of a M9Ti 32,000 $ off the shelf of an European dealers. What many well off European buyers do, however, is to buy expensive photo gear (jewlery, watches etc. etc.) at the typical 'tax free' outlest of the world; in the Middle East (Abu Dabi, Dubai) or the Far East (Hong Kong, Singapore) when they are out travelling. And then smuggling it back to Europe. That's why most Europeans are more afraid of a custom's officers than a terrorists.
The value of the dollar has little to do with my disappointment with Leica showing the M9ti at Photokina, the big innovation being LED's to light the framelines. I hope that Leica introduces a hybrid finder with the next real camera that they introduce, rather than this expensive toy. The "Pony in here somewhere" is that Leica will hopefully make at least 100% profit off of these M9ti's, and place some R&D into making the M9-II or M10 finder truly better than what it is now.
As far as the value of the dollar- Gasoline is under $2.50 per gallon here. A Gallon of milk is about the same. I think more people are concerned about everyday expenses rather than $26,000 cameras.
Let me preface this by saying I'm a Leica fan and an actual customer - I bought my M9 new from a dealer. I also have used gear (which makes me a customer too, despite the distinction some make - it was new once too).
I think if you could walk into any Leica dealer today, plop your cash on the counter - and walk out with an M9 and say, 1,4/50 Summilux in-hand... There might be less pissed off people out there.
But no. There's a waiting list on the M9. Half the lenses are backordered until who-knows-when. Heck, the 2/90 is supposedly backordered for a year and a half!
As long as everything works as it should, you move on. But wait. If there's a problem and you have to send your camera in - you'll be waiting weeks if not close to two months in some cases! That's just ridiculous by ANY standard.
We all know and accept that Leica is a small company and can only do so much at once. But instead of fulfilling M9 and lens orders, what are they doing? Making limited editions (some involving a fair bit of "R&D" or at least retooling) or stealing parts from the normal production line (e.g. 1,4/35 Lux). I mean, come on already - we have three special edition M9s already now. But the holiday season is coming...
Seems they're dedicating more resources to making a buck on rich collectors than keeping their actual, loyal customer base happy. I'm all for Leica making money and they can release special editions until the cows come home for all I care. But IMO, their priorities are a little mixed up.
^ Well, I guess photography isn't their driving motivation anymore, then. Disappointing.
The world is already chock full of money hungry me-too's.
Let me preface this by saying I'm a Leica fan and an actual customer - I bought my M9 new from a dealer. I also have used gear (which makes me a customer too, despite the distinction some make - it was new once too).
I think if you could walk into any Leica dealer today, plop your cash on the counter - and walk out with an M9 and say, 1,4/50 Summilux in-hand... There might be less pissed off people out there.
But no. There's a waiting list on the M9. Half the lenses are backordered until who-knows-when. Heck, the 2/90 is supposedly backordered for a year and a half!
As long as everything works as it should, you move on. But wait. If there's a problem and you have to send your camera in - you'll be waiting weeks if not close to two months in some cases! That's just ridiculous by ANY standard.
We all know and accept that Leica is a small company and can only do so much at once. But instead of fulfilling M9 and lens orders, what are they doing? Making limited editions (some involving a fair bit of "R&D" or at least retooling). I mean, come on already - we have three special edition M9s already now. But the holiday season is coming...
Seems they're dedicating more resources to making a buck on rich collectors than keeping their actual, loyal customer base happy. I'm all for Leica making money and they can release special editions until the cows come home for all I care. But IMO, their priorities are a little mixed up.
Dear Olsen,
A slight exaggeration. France: 19.6%. UK: 17.5% (admittedly rising to 20% next year).
Smuggling (or as we call it in Cornwall, 'free trading') has always struck me as being more trouble than it's worth, at least for cameras, but then, I'm VAT registered.
Cheers,
R.
As for "money hungry me-too's", could you perhaps name even one other company currently making top-flight RF cameras, both digital and film.
So far as I can tell, it is by no means clear that Leica is currently making film bodies, top-flight or otherwise.
Sorry, Olsen, no it doesn't. Putting 20% on the VAT-free price gives the VAT-inclusive price (with VAT at 20%).Putting a 25% markup on the 26.000 $ dollars givers a VAT of 20% of the sales price. We have had 20% (of the price) VAT here in Norway (Finland, Denmark and Sweden) for almost 10 years now.
So how much is an M9 inc' VAT, in Britain, or Aquitaine?
So far as I can tell, it is by no means clear that Leica is currently making film bodies, top-flight or otherwise.
Not quite as bad as I would have expected... Less the 17.5% VAT (is that right?) brings it VAT-free to £4128. Those two figures translate now to $7332.25 and $6240.22. At B&H Photo in NYC, the price is $6995 without sales tax.In UK a new M9 in VAT is a mere £4850.00 - http://www.reddotcameras.co.uk/product_info.php?cPath=16_23&products_id=1620