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- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Path: sparky!uunet!pmafire!geoff
- From: geoff@pmafire.inel.gov (Geoff Allen)
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.201022.7077@pmafire.inel.gov>
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 92 20:10:22 GMT
- Organization: Roller Coaster fanatic with no hope for a cure
- Subject: Camera toughness (Re: How do they know?)
- Summary:
- References: <1992Dec22.054431.23588@ultb.isc.rit.edu> <1992Dec22.115922.3218@sequent.com> <BzoC5B.A2w@watdragon.uwaterloo.ca>
- Followup-To:
- Organization: Roller Coaster fanatic with no hope for a cure
- Keywords:
- Lines: 122
-
- drraymon@watdragon.uwaterloo.ca (Darrell Raymond) writes:
- > Just for the record, though, the best robustness story I have seen so far
- >was about a guy who was shooting publicity photos for the US Air Force. The
- >plane he was in got into trouble, he and the pilot had to punch out at over
- >30,000 feet, and he "dropped" his R4. When they eventually found it on the
- >desert floor, he picked it up, and the shutter and mirror operated normally
- >(no glass was left intact, of course). I think Leica even repaired it under
- >their usual policy. And if they hadn't had such a policy, no doubt they would
- >have repaired it anyway, just for the publicity value.
-
-
- Here are some other robust camera stories for rec.photo's past, saved
- because I thought they were amusing.
-
- The airplane one is common enough that it almost sounds like an urban
- legend....
-
- Here we go:
-
- =====
- From: brian@crg8.sqnt.com (Brian Godfrey)
- Date: 5 Jul 90 17:38:38 GMT
- Organization: Sequent Computer Systems, Inc
-
- In article <1990Jul3.165733.1294@cbnewsm.att.com> ka1gt@cbnewsm.att.com (robert.m.atkins) writes:
- -suprise it worked. By the way, the spotmaticis a very rugged camera. I once
- -dropped it from the back of a Land Rover (english Jeep) onto the highway at
- -about 40mph. Not only did it still work, but the fall removed a speck of dirt
- -from the focusing screen which had been bothering me for months.
-
- After reading endless "toughest camera in the world" stories (and writing
- one or two of my own :-) I have to say that this is the best so far. Thanks
- for sharing it with us.
-
-
- =====
- From: Grant.Cunningham@p5.f222.n105.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Grant Cunningham)
- Date: 7 Jul 90 14:39:08 GMT
- Organization: FidoNet node 1:105/222.5 - The ASL Faction, Oregon City OR
-
- I think the all-time winner HAS to be the Leicaflex SL2-MOT that fell
- out of a jet fighter, 10,000 feet up, into the desert. It was found
- a year later--the meter still functioned, the back had remained light-
- tight, and Leica offered to repair it for free. The photog in question
- opted for new gear........
-
-
- =====
- From: ems@Apple.COM (Mike Smith)
- Date: 1 Aug 90 03:09:23 GMT
- Organization: Apple Computer Inc., Cupertino, CA
-
- > I once heard about some fellows who were using a Nikonos out in the
- >woods. ...
-
- Another Nikonos story: A custom car painting shop liked to do dramatic
- shots of cars in the process of being painted. The camera, of course,
- would accumulate alot of paint during the day (with period lens cleanings...).
-
- They would, at days end, dunk the camera into a bucket of solvent to wash
- off the thick layers of paint. The shop owner is reputed to have said:
-
- "The solvent ruins the O rings, so we have to put a new set in every day,
- but it sure cleans up the camera and doesn't seem to hurt it any..."
-
- It was, of course, a Nikonos ...
-
-
- =====
- From: dsp@polari.UUCP (Don Smith)
- Date: 1 Aug 90 21:33:03 GMT
- Organization: Seattle Online Public Unix (206) 328-4944
-
- Once there was a fellow who had get some shots inside a chamber
- where a person was spraying a foam onto some widgit, the foam was
- designed to disolve glass. So the photographer brought a bucket of
- "foam solvent" and dipped the camera in it every so often.
-
- I've also heard of medical photography being done where you have
- that trusty bucket of alcohol handy to kill the cooties on your camera.
-
- > It was, of course, a Nikonos ...
-
- Pretty much says it all,
- Don
-
-
- =====
- From: jack@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk (Jack Campin)
- Date: 22 Jan 92 18:41:48 GMT
- Organization: COMANDOS Project, Glesga Yoonie
-
- geoff@pmafire.inel.gov (Geoff Allen) wrote:
- > bjs@RUTS.ccc.amdahl.com (Barry Sherman) writes:
- >> I believe it was here in rec.photo that I read this quote, attributed to
- >> a famous photojournalist whose name I forget, and probably slightly mangled
- >> by my memory:
- >> When going on location I always take both my Nikon and my Leica. That
- >> way if one of them breaks I can still use the Leica.
-
- [one of the above stories posted by me in response to Barry's comment
- deleted]
-
- And some more:
-
- Someone here mentioned still being able to use his Crown Graphic after an
- elephant had crapped on it, and that the same type of camera had been used
- by a cornered war correspondent in Korea to beat an enemy soldier to death
- with (no information about how serviceable it was after).
-
- A photographer doing air-to-air shots for the USAF lost his Leicaflex SL2
- at 30000 feet in a collision above the desert. The camera was recovered,
- intact enough for the film to be developed and for repair to be possible.
-
- The most I've ever done is drop a Leica IIIA several feet onto concrete.
- It kept on working with no problem except the dent in the back shifted the
- pressure plate, reducing the depth of field.
-
- --
- Geoff Allen \ Macintosh Old-Fart Memory #111
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