FrankS
Registered User
Lighter fluid may work too.
Put inside a plastic container with lid, open the bottom plate and back take out the lens then put in charcoal let it stay for a week or two replacing the charcoal every 2 days. Charcoal will absorb the foul odor. Btw, you need to use real charcoal.
Thanks for all the responses. Much help, and now I've got a cherry (and clean smelling) near mint camera. Only problem is now my wife says she wants to get a cat.
Super high proof liquor, preferably something distilled many times so that the spirit is neutral in odor and flavor (think vodka or "white lightning"). Isopropyl alcohol also works.
Fill a bottle cap with a bit of the liquor then dip a q-tip and swab down the camera, all over. You never want to put enough where it's dripping. Also, be sure get it into the viewfinder or the rangefinder window.
I've cleaned several really dirty yard sale cameras and lenses this way to great result. Smoke Odors were never a problem but the cameras smelled of must and mildew for sure. In some cases I had to swab the camera down 3 or 4 times but eventually they got clean.