I contacted Christian Erhardt (Vice President of Marketing Photographic Division, Leica Camera USA) and this is the answer he gave me:
“Your questions comes timely, in fact just earlier this week I was in our factory where I saw the production of Leica’s M product lines. While we do not have a constant production of certain lenses and cameras, we have the ability to produce batches of those products. For example: Certain exotic lenses & cameras are produced in batches to be able to produce an economically feasible number of products.
In this case the M analog production line is just next to Leica’s M9 production line to which we have shifted our focus to better manage the backlog and reduce the wait for our customers.
As you might be well aware from the past, we have always stated that as long as it makes sense for Leica Camera AG to produce M analog cameras we will do so. At this time we are reaching our targeted numbers for M analog cameras and do well with the offering of Leica M a la Carte cameras. Just recently Leica Camera AG offered a special Leica M7 Hermes Camera. This camera was quickly sold out and is a sought after collectors camera.
At this time I have no indication that the Leica M analog cameras will be taken out of Leica’s product offering.”
I'd like to get a new Leica, but I can't afford one. I'd settle for a used one, but I can't afford that either. Thirty years ago I could afford a new one even less. Or a used one even less. My 83-year-old mother told me my late father really, really wanted to buy one in the early 1950s, but he couldn't afford one then or even later in his life. He died being unable to afford one. I will suffer the same fate.
When the inability to purchase something - or even just to dream of purchasing something - becomes a generational thing, it rather softens the "blow" of being told that manufacturing of that thing has ceased. At least my son will not have to suffer a third generation of frustration...
Ken
Galah-
What is the enormous design fault of which you speak?
Galah-
What is the enormous design fault of which you speak?
I personally spoke with a Leica representative last year (around the time the M9 was announced) at a small trade show. He had several models available to show including the M8, M7, and MP. I asked him about the future of analog Leica cameras. He said what others here have said: that Leica had no plans to develop new analog models ever again, but that they would keep making the M7 and MP. He felt that Leica would probably be the last company to stop producing 35mm cameras.
Galah-
What is the enormous design fault of which you speak?
Well, simply, that it is a rangefinder -with all the limitations in usefulness/convenience that involves
(Of course, the reflex and (some?) digital models have avoided these issues.)
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