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The pinnacle of mechanical technology: LEICA M-A The precision tool for lovers of decelerated photography

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With the Leica M-System, Leica Camera AG, Wetzlar, is one of the few manufacturers still producing both analogue and digital cameras. In this, the company can draw from decades of experience in the construction of the finest precision-engineered cameras. Now – 60 years after the first Leica M rangefinder camera, the M3, left the factory to significantly change the world of photography – we have chosen the occasion of this anniversary to present a new analogue model: the Leica M-A.

As a purely mechanical rangefinder camera, the Leica M-A stands for a return to photography in its most original form. Without reliance on a monitor, exposure metering or batteries, photographers can explore entirely new creative horizons. Because, with a camera reduced to only essential camera functions, users of the M-A can now concentrate entirely on the essential parameters of subject composition – namely focal length, aperture and shutter speed – and on capturing the decisive moment.

From its shutter-speed dial and the aperture ring on the lens to the characteristic rangefinder focusing principle – the technical specifications of the Leica M-A are essentially based on the currently available analogue Leica MP. All of its precision-engineered components and functions are designed and constructed for absolute robustness and a long working life, and are housed in a painstakingly hand-built metal body. This ensures that the Leica M-A, as a product with particularly enduring value, brushes aside every challenge with absolute dependability.

The visible elements of the Leica M-A are as timeless as the precision-engineered principles employed inside it. For example, the Leica red dot was omitted to emphasise the classical simplicity of its design. Seen from the side, the Leica M-A is significantly slimmer than its digital counterparts.

The camera can be supplied in a choice of two different finishes: the classic appearance of the silver chrome version carries forward the traditions of 60 years of Leica M design. In the black chrome alternative, the M-A is reminiscent of the style of the M Monochrom and sets new standards in unobtrusiveness and discretion. While the silver chrome version of the M-A displays its origins in the engraving on its top plate, only much closer scrutiny of its completely matt black counterpart reveals the discreetly engraved Leica script on its accessory shoe.

Each Leica M-A is supplied complete with Kodak Tri-X 400 black-and-white film, which is also celebrating its 60th anniversary this year. Since its appearance on the market in 1954, its unmistakeable look, exceptional sharpness and tonal gradation, extremely broad exposure latitude and very good shadow detail made this black-and-white film a firm favourite and the classic medium for art and reportage photography.

The Leica M-A will be available from authorised Leica dealers starting October 2014.

 

Technical data LEICA M-A

Camera type:                                   
Leica M-A (type 127) compact, 35 mm rangefinder system camera with a mechanically controlled shutter
Lens mount:                        
Leica M-Bayonet
Lens system:                       
Leica M-Lenses,16–135 mm
Exposure control:               
Manual setting of shutter speed and aperture with values from an external exposure meter or by estimation

Flash exposure control

Flash connection:               
 Hot shoe – accessory shoe with centre contact
Synchronisation:                 
On first shutter curtain
Flash exposure control:     
Computer control by the flash unit or guide number calculation and manual setting of the required aperture value

Viewfinder

Viewfinder principle:          
Large, bright, combined bright-line viewfinder with automatic parallax compensation
Eyepiece:                              
Adjusted to –0.5 dioptres; correction lenses available for –3 to +3 dioptres
Image field framing:           
By projection of pairs of bright-line frames for 28 and 90 mm, 35 and 135 mm, 50 and 75 mm lenses; automatic display of corresponding frames when lenses are locked into the bayonet mount
Frame selector:                   
Lever enabling alternative frame pairs to be displayed in the viewfinder without changing lenses (e.g. for framing comparisons)
Parallax compensation:     
The horizontal and vertical differences between the viewfinder and lens axes are automatically compensated for in relation to the focusing distance

Concordance of

viewfinder and film image:            
The bright-line frame size corresponds to an image size of approx. 23 × 35 mm at the minimum focusing distance for all focal lengths; focused at infinity, and depending on the focal length, approx. 9% (28 mm) to 23% (135 mm) more will be captured on the film than is shown in the corresponding bright-line frame
Magnification                      
0.72× (for all lenses)

Long-base

rangefinder:                         
Coincident and superimposed image rangefinder, shown as a bright field at the centre of the viewfinder image
Effective rangefinder base:
49.9 mm (mechanical rangefinder base 69.25 mm × viewfinder magnification 0.72×)

Shutter and shutter release

Shutter:                                
Horizontal rubberised-cloth focal plane shutter; extremely low noise; mechanically controlled
Shutter speeds:                   
From 1 s to 1/1000 s in one-stop increments, B for exposure times of arbitrary length
Shutter release:                  
Standard internal thread for remote-release cables

Film loading, advance and rewinding

Loading:                               
Manual loading after removal of the base and opening the rear flap
Film advance:                      
Manually, with rapid wind lever or Leicavit M; motorised, with Leica Motor-M, Leica Winder-M, Leica Winder M4-P or Leica Winder M4-2 (from article number 10 350)
Rewinding:                           
Manual, pull-out rewind knob after disconnecting the advance mechanism with the R-lever on the front of the camera
Frame counter:                    
On camera top plate; automatically reset when camera baseplate removed

Camera body

Material:                               
One-piece full-metal body with rear flap; top deck and baseplate in brass with black or silver chrome finish
Tripod bush:                        
Thread A 1/4, DIN 4503 (1/4")
Rear flap/features:             
Reminder dial for film sensitivity
Dimensions:                        
Approx. 138 × 38 × 77 (length × depth × height, in mm)
Weight:                                 
Approx. 578 g
Package includes:               
Body cap and carrying strap

Leica M-A
English
Format
zip (24.26 MB)
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Leica Camera – A Partner for Photography

Leica Camera AG is an international, premium manufacturer of cameras and sports optics. The legendary reputation of the Leica brand is based on a long tradition of excellent quality, German craftsmanship and German industrial design, combined with innovative technologies. An integral part of the brand's culture is the diversity of activities the company undertakes for the advancement of photography. In addition to the Leica Galleries and Leica Akademies spread around the world, there are the Leica Hall of Fame Award and, in particular, the Leica Oskar Barnack Award (LOBA), which is considered one of the most innovative sponsorship awards existing today. Furthermore, Leica Camera AG, with its headquarters in Wetzlar, Hesse, and a second production site in Vila Nova de Famalicão, Portugal, has a worldwide network of its own national organisations and Leica Retail Stores.