Leica LTM Load A Leica Bottom-Loader!

Leica M39 screw mount bodies/lenses

doubs43

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There has been so many posts by people who find loading a bottom-loading Leica, FED etc. a chore that I've done a very quick down & dirty "How To" in pictures. I hope this will take the "mystery" out of stuffing film in the bottom of those cameras!

There are eight pictures so this will be done in two separate posts.

Picture One: You need the film, a pair of sissors and the camera.

Picture Two: Pull about 3 1/2 inches of film from the cassette. Four sprocket holes from the cassette, begin your cut and try to approximate what you see here. I add the little snips on the end to sort of round the leader but it's not necessary.

Picture Three: Remove the bottom of the camera body and remove the take-up spool.

Picture Four: Insert the leader under the flat spring of the take-up spool as shown. Note that the film is up against the flange of the spool at the top.

Picture Five: A closer view of the film in the take-up spool.

Now go to the second post for the remainder of the pictures and instructions.
 
doubs43 said:
There has been so many posts by people who find loading a bottom-loading Leica, FED etc. a chore...

This may sound wierd, but I can load my M quicker than I can load my R2 or my CLE. I actually prefer bottom-loading. :D
 
Picture Six: With the cassette in your left hand and the take-up spool in your right hand, pull a little more film from the cassette. Now insert BOTH at the same time BUT twist the take-up spool slightly clock-wise so that the film is against the back of the loading chamber and at 90 degrees to the flat spring that is holding the film to the spool. The idea is to clear the sprocket teeth. Seat both the cassette and the take-up spool at the same time. Note that the film is clear of the sprocket teeth.

Picture Seven: With the film rewind clutch in the film advance position (rotated back toward the film advance knob), make sure the rewind has engaged the cassette properly. Now pull the rewind shaft out and s-l-o-w-l-y take up the slack in the film. As you do, watch the take-up spool and ensure that as the film tension increases, the film holes engage the sprocket teeth. Seat the rewind shaft to it's normal position.

Picture Eight: Note that the film holes are engaged by the film advance sprocket teeth.

With the bottom still off, advance the film one frame and note that the film takes up and that the rewind knob turns to indicate that the film is being advanced. If all has gone as expected, you can replace the bottom, fire the shutter and advance the film once again and trip the shutter. Set the counter to zero and you're ready to advance to frame one and take pictures.

Piece of cake........ right? ;)
 
RayPA said:
This may sound wierd, but I can load my M quicker than I can load my R2 or my CLE. I actually prefer bottom-loading. :D


you're right ray, it does sound wierd!
-----------------------------------------------

nice job walker!
thanks,
joe
 
RayPA said:
This may sound wierd, but I can load my M quicker than I can load my R2 or my CLE. I actually prefer bottom-loading. :D

I'm not surprised. Bottom loading may take a little practice but it's NOT as difficult as people make it out to be. Leica made bottom loaders for at least 30 years before going to an open-back loading camera and then it wasn't a fully-open type.

I just hope that this post will help take some of the challenge out of it for those who have never loaded a Leica through the bottom before.

Joe, this was a very quick project and not as comprehensive as I'd like to do. When I get the time, I'll try to do a better job with more and better pics.

Walker
 
It's kind of like catching one of those public service anouncements that teach you something you didn't realize was good to know.
 
It's all straight forward and easy for me until it gets semi-dark, such as an outdoor concert.


I like to visually check to see if the sprocket holes in the film are aligned with the sprocket teeth before installing the bottom cover. So I've added a miniature LED flash light to the lanyard of my light meter. Also, the film clip on the Leica take-up spool is a bit tighter than its Russian counter part. Having the light dangling from my neck helps here as well.

Another reason for the LED is that my light meter has no back-light.
 
Thank you, Walker!!! Excellent timing!! I'm expecting a Zorki I in the mail pretty soon and this thread will be invaluable!!!
 
For you FSU bottom feeders---er loaders it might be worth noting that some of the later FSU spools for these camera have a hook that hooks through a film sprocket hole rather than the Leica-Type tensioned clip. Makes for a sure-fire hook-up ....BUT... when you rewind, the piece of film right at the end of the leader usually breaks off at the sprocket holes where the hook is. It's a good idea to keep the camrera bottom down until you remove the bottom plate. Otherwise that tiny piece of film can get into the gear train and cause problems. Almost every FED or Zorki 1 I've ever opened has had at least one piece of leader floating around in critical areas or already jammed into a gear.
 
For those hooked spools ... using fingernails, tear away the outer edge forming the last few sprocket holes so there will be no chips.
 
I believe the original poster is providing a guide for loading film into a Leica thread mount camera, not an M. Loading an M is a entire different thing and it is fast.
 
By now a book could probably be produced with all the articles that have been written about how to load a Leica RF. The story goes that the bottom-loading idea was to make a sturdier body. I don't have any screw-mount models, but I don't find my M4-2 so damned difficult to load.

About all those articles - Did anyone ever hear of an INSTRUCTION BOOK - probably provided, at least originally, with every Leica ever made.
 
dll927 said:
.....I don't have any screw-mount models, but I don't find my M4-2 so damned difficult to load.....
Is the M4-2 supposed to be hard to load? I thought it loaded just like the M4 and later M cameras.
 
If the M4-2 does load like the M4 than it is very much easier to load than the screw mount models.

Bob
 
For screwmount models, I would recommend the following in addition to the excellent info in the original posts...

If your camera has a "T" option (my IIIc has it...), remove the lens, set to "T" and fire the shutter which will open the shutter and keep it open. As you slide the film and spool in from the bottom, the film often snags on the edge of the shutter window and it is now easy to see and to gently guide it past that point with your finger and all the way in to place.

The operative word is GENTLY.

Hope that helps...

Tuna
 
Now that I have run some rolls through my IIIC, there is one thing that I have noticed that may make things easier for some people.

When you put the film leader into the spool, it should be jammed under the tab pretty good. If you tug on it, the film should offer some resistance. If it comes right out, pull up on the tab a bit until you can get it far enough for the film to do so.

When you are rewinding a roll, this allows you to tell when you have wound all the way back to the leader. Which I find makes things easier, when I am loading up reels.

Hope that helps people avoid the dreaded 36 shots of air that seems so common to first time bottom loader users :D

Richie
 
wtl said:
I believe the original poster is providing a guide for loading film into a Leica thread mount camera, not an M. Loading an M is a entire different thing and it is fast.

My M3 loads with a take-up spool, not the three-prongs......
 
As someone else stated, there is not much similarity between loading a Leica M and a true screw mount bottom loader. You don't even have to cut a special tongue when loading an M because the pressure swings up and out of the way.

A key in a bottom loader is to cut the tongue long enough so you can hook it to the take-up spool with the full-width film still on the cassette side of the actual 24 x 36 frame where the film is exposed. That way, when you begin pulling the film across, both edges will be riding on the film rails and can't curl up and get hooked in the frame. Another key is to make sure the leader sprocket holes mesh properly with the teeth of the take-up sprocket.

It may sound technical but it really isn't once you get the hang of it. I can cut an appropriate leader without using a template and the film will load properly the first try 9 out of 10 times (about as good an average as I have on a non-autoloading SLR). IT REALLY ISN"T THAT DIFFICULT.
 
I wonder if Henri C-B found screw-mount Leicas hard to get along with.

Yes, the M4-2 loads like any other M series - which is a good bit easier than the LTMs.
 
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