Tuesday (20-January-2015) — New Jersey

Technology: Leica T Camera — Cold Weather Issues & Limitations.

How cold does it get in Germany in the winter? The reason I ask has to do with a new camera I have been using. For several years I had a Leica X1 and Leica X2 as my trusty travel camera. They worked, and provided me with some of my best images while traveling. At times I did regret that they had a fixed 24 mm lens so was intrigued when the Leica T mirrorless camera was announced that allowed interchangeable lenses. The first two lenses were a  23 mm f/2 (which would be close to the 24 mm lenses on the X1 and X2) and a 18-56 mm lens. I wasn’t able to get the camera and lenses before the Semester at Sea Spring 2014 Enrichment Voyage and the Summer 2014 Semester Voyage.

After I returned from the Semester at Sea Voyages I did get the Leica T camera and the two lenses. I brought them along on my Hurtigurten Christmas voyage to Antarctica. Initially I planned to use the Leica T as my 2nd camera for travel image. My primary camera for the trip was a Nikon Df and 80-400 mm VRII lens for bird pictures. On the 2nd day of the voyage, the shutter on the Nikon Df failed, and the Leica T became my primary camera. The 18-56 mm lens (27-85 mm equivalent based on the sensor) wasn’t really what I wanted for the bird images – but I had to deal with it.

The annoying issue with the Leica T camera was that it would lock-up in cold weather. When this happened, you had no control over any functions, including the shutter and the on/off switch. The rear monitor or EVF monitor remained on and would follow whatever you were pointing the camera at – and as a result continue to drain the battery. I  set the camera to shut off after 1 minute, but when the camera locked-up it didn’t shut off. The only way to recover was to remove and reinstall the battery. The temperatures in the places we were visiting (Falkland Islands, South Georgia Islands, and the Northern Peninsula of Antarctica) at this time of the year (remember it is summer there now) never were below 30°F / -1°C. I’ve used many other digital cameras at temperatures well below this. The battery life wasn’t as long, but that was something I could deal with.

When I got back from the Antarctic trip I sent a message to Leica Support in the US. This was their response. “My understanding is that 0°C / 32°F is the lowest temperature within the operating range.  If by chance there was any wind chill factor at the time you were shooting that of course would have pushed the temperature even further away from ideal.  In a cold environment it is recommended to keep extra batteries in a warm place and swap them with the one in the camera periodically, minimize the length of time the camera is exposed as much as possible, and consider finding a way to insulate the camera somewhat while it is out.

Did Leica really design a camera that can only work above 32°F / 0°C? I am curious if there are any other Leica T users out there that have used their cameras in really cold weather.

One-Year Ago (23-November-2011) — New Jersey

Black Friday: Nikon 1 V1 Mirrorless Camera.

One year ago (23-November-2011),  I got my Nikon 1 V1 camera. My image database indicates that I have taken over 50K pictures with this camera, and this doesn’t count video. Granted, about half of the images were when I used the camera for taking time-lapsed images while driving on a road trip to Florida last year and New Mexico this year. It is a great travel camera being significantly lighter than the DSLR cameras I use. It does have its idiosyncrasies. I don’t like the location of some of the controls/dial, the propensity for the rear mode selection dial to move/change — I have lost images because the camera  was not in the right mode (mood???). I did get the adapter to use Nikon F-mount lenses, the GPS adapter, the flash adapter, and the remote adapter. I really would like a wider lens for the camera. The field of view for the 10 mm lens on this camera is equivalent to 27 mm on a FX (35 mm sensor) DSLR. A 6 or 7 mm lens would be nice (16-19 mm equivalent). For wider landscape images, I end up taking multiple images and stitching them together in post processing.

Thursday (24-November-2011) — Pennsylvania

Autumn in Pennsylvania: New Mirrorless Camera (Nikon 1 V1).

I got up early this morning to see how the new Nikon 1 V1 mirrorless digital camera performs. I spent the night reading the manual to get an idea of how to use the camera. As with anything new, you have to use it to really understand its capabilities. I drove to the Lambertville – New Hope bridge for some early dawn images. The Delaware river was up a little over 4 feet in the last day due to all of the rain we got on Tuesday and Wednesday. Still below flood stage but up more than usual. The following image is an old building in New Hope along the Delaware river, taken from across the river in the Lambertville Station parking lot. The Raw image was converted to jpg using Adobe Lightroom 3.6 RC with no additional processing. Note that I had to upgrade from Lightroom 3.5 to the 3.6 Release Candidate in order to be able to see and process the image with Lightroom. More images to follow, and I need to check out if my other Raw image processing programs are able to handle images from this new camera.

Later in the afternoon, I had a great Thanksgiving dinner with neighbors across the street. (Images next post). Right now the camera is outside to see how it performs capturing Night Sky images.

New Hope from Lambertville across the Delaware River. Image taken with a Nikon 1 V1 and 10-100 mm Lens (ISO 110, 100 mm, f/5.6, 1/60 sec) (David J Mathre)
New Hope from Lambertville across the Delaware River. Image taken with a Nikon 1 V1 and 10-100 mm Lens (ISO 110, 100 mm, f/5.6, 1/60 sec) (David J Mathre)