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Leica Refinishing


leo_maniace2

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For a CLA i use Will van Manen in the Netherlands. Very good and good price. He can be reached through kamera-service.info. In the process of the CLA he will also touch up the body work, and repair small spots on the vulcanite.

A new vulcanite is a DIY job, after purchase of a new skin from Aki Asahi.

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DAG, Sherry, Youxin - any of them.

My personal vote (as long as any pure mechanical M talking, M3 in particular) goes to Youxin.

Just recently did an wonderful job of bringing totally non-operational, heavy beater M3 to a new life, wondeffully smooth mechanics, new shutter curtains, thorough CLA, etc...now my M3 is smoother and queter then my flawless M6...

Moreover, Youxin charges very reasonable...

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Your 1st post stated clearly: "Can anyone tell me the name and contact information for a Leica refinishing/CLA service". No question about asking if people were satisfied with anyone's service or what their experiences were.

 

In any case, Google will find you not just the contacts, but lots of discussion threads and experiences.

 

The Net has changed in the last 5 years. With Google, Wiki, Youtube, Skype, Facebook, etc. It's possible to get so much more out of the Net now, all it takes is just one click on a search engine.

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A lot depends on what you mean by "refinishing." Changing the leatherette is easy to have done. Cameraleather.com, for instance. But "refinishing" can also mean stripping the chrome off and having it painted black, gray hammertone, olive drab, etc. There'a fellow named Shintaro in Japan who has been popular for this. The CRR Luton referral is another. For a CLA, Sherry Krauter did my M3. Don Goldberg did my M6. John Van Stelten did my M2. John Maddox did my two IIIc's. Fine techs, all of them.
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Youxin is a very reliable, honest and meticulous guy, who obviously loves what he does!! I

bought an M3 from him on Ebay, and felt it wasn't as described, and he refunded my money

plus postage BEFORE I returned the camera, and then sent me a cheque for the cost of return

postage... a gentelman!!!! Sherry is IMHO a bit overpriced.

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Bob,

 

The Internet has changed a lot since 15 years ago when PN was set up. Anyone who doesn't appreciate the power of Google, the richness, accuracy and authoritativeness of info on Wiki or the effort put into Leica info in Andrew Nemeth's FAQ and other such Leica resources is, in my view, doing himself no favours.

 

Forums have a place, primarily for discussion, but it gets tiring to keep answering the same questions all over again.

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Wai-Leong...guess I'm just in a pissy mood but...

 

A question from you only 2 months ago..."I'm looking for a little more contrast and pop in one of my negs, but when I tried printing it at grade 4, I got more grain everywhere, particularly in the shadow areas, compared to grade 2.

Is this normal? If so, then is there any other way of getting more contrast without paying a penalty for grain?"

 

Gee, I google film grain and got 11 million responses.

 

So only you are allowed to ask questions here that can be found by doing a web search?

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Really? Then I won't look to you for anything then. Ever.

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I don't think the answer is there. Sites I've gone through all talk about it as a given, but no one I can find talks about how to avoid it.

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But I said before, and let me be clear on this. The Internet has changed in the last 5 years. Google and Wiki are now the best sources of knowledge, far more reliable and authoritative than most forums.

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Google is much more powerful and much more accurate than any search engine in the history of mankind. If you consider the billions of pages that exist, and the millions of searches at any point in time, to pinpoint the relevant ones in less than the time it takes to blink is nothing short of miraculous.

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Ditto Wiki, it's more powerful and more user friendly that any encyclopedia has ever been. Better than Britannica or even Encarta ever were.

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Leica forum on PN too has a great deal of authoritative information in its forum archives from experts.

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Which is why our forum creators have added Google search to PN. Even the posting page says, "Please take a moment to ask yourself if what you're about to post is going to be useful to the person who asked the question. Then ask yourself if, when someone stumbles upon this exchange four years from now via a <B>Google search</B>, they are going to say 'that was worth my time to read'."

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To ignore such powerful resources which are available at your fingertips, sounds foolhardy to me. It is not making best use of the Internet.

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I might even add that Wiki is a lot more authoritative than asking for "opinions", "comments", etc. Ask 20 people about exposure and you might get 20 different answers, some wrong, some half wrong, and some right. It takes a long time to get the answers, to sift out the right answers from the wrong ones, to wade through the off-topic posts and to separate the opinions and prejudices from the facts.

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Ask people about whether Leica is good value over better ZI or Voigtlander and you'll always get a fight. The heat and noise drowns out any light and illumination you might get from posting your question.

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Why go through all that when Wiki is at your fingertips?

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Unlike you Bob, I don't believe in spoonfeeding. It's better that people learn how to fish for themselves.

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