The 24mm 2.8 elmarit R lens has a similar history -- it was made by Minolta but German took delivery of a huge pile of them, weeded out the inferior ones and then altered the ones they accepted so much that they could qualify for "made in germany" designation.
further discussion: http://leica.nemeng.com/013c.shtml
No, labeling has to be real. a certain percentage of the camera has to be made/assembled in Germany to allow it to be labeled as such.
It's the somewhat wrong believe that german engineering is the best in the world. Don't ask me about the new Mercedes cars and their quality same goes for BMW and other German car manufacturers. Even at the height of German engineering the products were often overengineered to a point that hindered the product in the long run Zeiss Ikon cameras are a good example great as long as they work but boy can they get complicated when you want to repair them all those interlocks etc...
I owned a 1993 Audi 90 CS. It was, along with a 1966 VW bug, one of the worst cars I've ever known. I will NEVER again buy a car made in Germany. What nonsense this 'best engineering in the world' crap is.
I owned a 1993 Audi 90 CS. It was, along with a 1966 VW bug, one of the worst cars I've ever known. I will NEVER again buy a car made in Germany. What nonsense this 'best engineering in the world' crap is.
I can add two more.
My wife and I did a house sit in South Carolina, and the owners had a Mercedes 500 series and a Cadillac, both mid-seventies, bought new about six months apart, the Mercedes cost almost three times as much as the Caddy. They both had about 155,000 miles on them when we were there, and the Caddy was on the go regularly, because the Mercedes was always broke down. if it wasn't the transmission, it was the electrics, and then the timing chain broke, and that cost another $1800. Meanwhile, the Caddy had had nothing but routine maintenance, and was still going strong. Mercedes and the like are really good, for about six or seven years, and then look out.
Thanks, I'll take a Ford or a Chevy and an Olympus or a Canon any day.
When you buy a Leica you're buying the assurance that this camera meets Leica's standards regardless of where it's made. The same thing when you buy Apple's iPad; you're buying the assurance that this chinese tablet meets the high standards of Apple.
Go to Detroit to see the american engineering and Tokyo to count radiation from mighty japanese engineering.
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