Jonathan R
Well-known
TenEleven, Erik van Straten, Sarcophilis Harrisii ... Thank you all very much, this is very valuable information.
Does anyone have a link or brand recommendation for the special screwdriver?
Throw the rangefinder out for a minute...
When lenses (all of them!) are mounted on the camera and set to infinity does the image appear in sharp focus on the film plane? This is the first question that needs to be answered by any Technician. An advanced home repair amateur can check for collimation with an slr (with a long focal length lens) and a couple of tripods.
If the answer to the above question is yes then the next part is really rather easy, adjust the rangefinder to be perfectly aligned when (any) lens is mounted focused at infinity and pointed at the moon.
You are talking about Leica Glass on a Leica body, lens cams do not "wear out" and accepting anything else but a correctly adjusted camera lens/RF should not be an option.
here is an old thread on this topic please have a look. hope it helps
https://www.photo.net/discuss/threads/m6-vertical-adjustment-diy-special-enjoy.341352/
There is a non destructive way to adjust the lenses, if and only if they are short of infinity on the RF which I will detail here:
Get some women's nail-color "top hard coat" or "varnish". Mine is called "topcoat" - it is clear. No color. Your wife may have it. It is clear and dries quite flat and very hard. It sticks well to brass and aluminum in my experience. Gently apply a very thin(!) it only takes very little(!) layer to the spot where the infinity position is on the lens cam, or if you want to adjust the whole range the whole cam. I've done either or depending on the lens and its focus behavior.
So Erik, just to be clear, are you saying that you dedicate a camera body to one particular lens by adjusting the rangefinder? And after making that adjustment that camera body may or may not suit other lenses?
Throw the rangefinder out for a minute...
When lenses (all of them!) are mounted on the camera and set to infinity does the image appear in sharp focus on the film plane? This is the first question that needs to be answered by any Technician. An advanced home repair amateur can check for collimation with an slr (with a long focal length lens) and a couple of tripods.
If the answer to the above question is yes then the next part is really rather easy, adjust the rangefinder to be perfectly aligned when (any) lens is mounted focused at infinity and pointed at the moon.
You are talking about Leica Glass on a Leica body, lens cams do not "wear out" and accepting anything else but a correctly adjusted camera lens/RF should not be an option.
Adjusting a camera so a lens will focus at infinity with a particular lens is an important thing to know. Something like how does a radio wave get from point a to point b, it must pass through some medium of some sort, never figured that one out.