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james_elwing

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  1. Thanks for sending photos. Interesting camera and accessory stuff. Shutter looks viable, what one can see of it, but lenses and viewfinders cloudy, look a bit in need of professional help. Hope you feel like having it all cleaned and lubricated, repaired only as necessary, as it's an interesting camera. Lens (50mm) looks like 1941, and the Schneider lens looks like it would be 135mm. Obviously cost is not an issue (joke), but at least you could get somebody good to look at it all and go from there.
  2. Richard's response if it happened to ship in an unusual configuration (e.g. with a winder base plate) is very possible. Given the Sn. it belongs to a wartime period when parts would have been hard to come by, and just post war when some Leicas were apparently assembled from existing parts still in the factory. As you probably know by now, its serial number is 1943-46 and the K means it has a superior winterised roller bearing shutter. Leica has always been very helpful in the past when I wrote to them for information; there is probably a link on the Leica website. How about a few more photos, like shutter curtains, lens (Summitar?). (please)
  3. If the original plate was damaged or lost, what you have would have been a common sense replacement. Incidentally, what colours are the shutter curtains; could be red & black; very desirable.
  4. The C/V 10mm and 12mm M lenses would make respectable 13mm & 16mm lenses on the M9; M8 of course, not M9
  5. The C/V 10mm and 12mm M lenses would make respectable 13mm & 16mm lenses on the M9
  6. True. Digital Leicas at least, don't have sensor vibration on shut down. Canon EOS does, and it's a boon. I haven't had had a dust issue in over 10 years, while the M9 sensor often looked a bit like a CD on loan from the public library (exaggeration).
  7. There is no base plate. That makes a difference. I would keep it with its case...
  8. Irritatingly right again, Richard. I knew the thought must have come from somewhere. There are no such instructions on my Leica I; I should look further before I say anything more. Thank you.
  9. Of course you are right, Richard. No loading instructions appear to ever be on the base plates.
  10. Pentax SMC lenses get caught on Praktica bodies I think. If Fujica has locking pin, its lenses may get caught in mount holes the same way. I don't think early Contax S/D fit lenses (early 1950's) fit all later cameras as they block the pin stop mechanism.
  11. Looks like a regular Leica base plate to me, minus the film loading instructions
  12. mine are 47g, 44g, 44g Yours is for the larger tripod screw, therefore, should be 44g. What are you using to measure it? 1 oz seems rather a round figure. I am pretty sure the base is for a IIIc, as the IIIf bases I have seen look different at the tripod screw.
  13. Mr Troll, sir; I second the Morgan and Morgan. I think up to the 13th it was Morgan and Lester, the 14th Morgan and Morgan. I have just been looking them up. Very bright and inventive people, including Morgan's wife Barbara. Apparently Lester left in 1956. Isn't it great what you can find....
  14. I get 47g, again post war, by electronic scales, so who can be sure. I have another few at work I can check, one of which is wartime 1941 I think.
  15. Base sounds quite interesting. Leica body chrome often looks a bit matted and soft, so that's probably what it is, just a replacement for a lost or damaged part. Yes photos would be nice, thanks.
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