Laser flash photolysis (308 nm) of Mn(CO)(5)CH3 (I) in different solvents leads predominantly to CO photodissociation and the formation of reactive intermediates formulated as the solvento complexes cis-Mn(CO)(4)(solv)CH3. This conclusion is based upon the solvent sensitivity of the time-resolved infrared spectra and the dynamics of reactions with various ligands. For example, the reaction of cis-Mn(CO)(4)(solv)CH3 with CO displays second-order kinetics with a rate constant k(co) nearly 8 orders of magnitude larger for solv = perfluoro-(methylcyclohexane) than for solv = tetrahydrofuran. The k(L) values for the second-order reaction of cis-Mn(CO)(4)(solv)CH3 in cyclohexane with various ligands L follow the approximate order 4-phenylpyridine approximate to H2O approximate to THF > P(OMe)(3) approximate to PPh(3) > CO approximate to N-2. The quantitative behaviors of intermediates seen in the flash photolysis of I are compared with those seen in similar studies of the acetyl complex Mn(CO)(5)(COCH3) (II) (Organometallics, 1993, 12, 4739-4741), and this comparison is used to substantiate the earlier conclusion that CO dissociation from II in weakly coordinating solvents leads to an eta(2)-acyl-coordinated intermediate rather than to a solvento complex.