Leica's coupled-RF c-series body — the IIc, no slow speeds, 39mm screw, cloth shutter, 1948.
The Leica IIc was a post-war screw-mount Barnack body from around 1948, sitting between the finder-less Ic and the slow-speed IIIc in the c-series. It carried a coupled rangefinder but omitted the slow speeds of the III bodies.
It is a 35mm coupled-rangefinder camera taking 39mm screw-thread lenses, with a horizontal-travel cloth focal-plane shutter covering the faster speed range without the slow-speed dial. Focusing and framing use separate rangefinder and viewfinder windows, there is no built-in meter, and the shutter is fully mechanical and battery-free.
It suits collectors and photographers who want a coupled-rangefinder Barnack without slow speeds for daylight street and travel work. The two-window layout follows earlier screw Leicas, and the c-series body casting improved on pre-war construction.
Check rangefinder patch contrast and vertical alignment, as post-war patches can dim with age. Inspect the cloth curtains for pinholes and capping, test the available speeds, and look for finder haze in both windows. Confirm a clean screw mount and smooth film transport.