The R SLR Era · 1964–2009

Leica R8

CameraLeica R mountMade in Germany1996–20021008010081

Famous for

  • The last and most refined R-mount SLR, with a built-in motor drive and large ergonomic grip
  • Often used with APO-Telyt and APO-Summicron-R lenses by wildlife and sports photographers

The Leica R8, introduced in 1996, was the penultimate R-system SLR (the R9 followed in 2002 with a digital back option). It is a large camera by any standard — deliberately so, with an ergonomic grip and a substantial body that gave it a distinctive profile unlike any other Leica. It accepted all R-mount lenses and offered modern multi-mode metering, multiple exposure options, and compatibility with the Digital-Modul-R back when used with the R9.

The R8 was Leica's most technologically complete SLR, and it sold respectably to professionals who valued Leica R optics and build quality. When Leica discontinued the R system entirely in 2009, the R8 and R9 became the final expression of Leica's forty-year experiment in SLR photography. R lenses are now frequently adapted to mirrorless bodies, giving them a second life.

Key specs

type
35mm SLR
mount
Leica R
metering
multi-zone, spot, center-weighted
shutter
metal focal-plane, 16s–1/8000 + B
production
1996–2002

Variants & finishes

Silver10080

The R8 in silver — Leica's flagship SLR of the late 1990s with a distinctive asymmetric grip designed by Porsche Design. The R system's most capable body before it was discontinued.

Market value

Used-market price history is coming soon.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leica_R8

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