cralx2000 said:
Please let me know if you have some tips.
Well <lol> the one tip I might suggest is to not take it apart unless you REALLY need to. <vbfg>
🙂 🙂 🙂
I'm in the first phase of the camera repair. Here is what i got so far.
http://home.swbell.net/leao/
I need learn how to calibration and lubrication.
You've got yours stripped down a lot more than I had to. May I ask what doesn't work on yours, or are you just trying to do more of preventive stuff or general clean-up and such?
The one thing I've been looking for and haven't found is a concise and authoritative source (like a book or something) on basic camera calibration and lubrication. It almost seems like it's a craft that's passed on from master to apprentice within a guild, the members of which are sworn to secrecy.
🙂 🙂
The people here are really super about passing on what they've learned either by experience or from others. This is mostly bits and pieces of practical advice on one specific topic, like how to un-stick a stuck shutter, how to remove the front lens element, how to do the harder-than-it-looks messy replacement of light seals, etc.
The message board on the Classic Camera Repair Forum has been very helpful too.
There are 2 pieces of information I'm trying to get hold of, and haven't so far ...
1. How to lubricate the shutter. What I have now, I'm sure, is a shutter with 25-30 year old lubrication that's been partly reactivated by some Ronsonol seepage. My instinct says that it should be properly lubricated again.
2. Anybody who has tried and succeeded (or failed) to recalibrate (or intentionally mis-calibrate by one stop) the meter so the range is ASA/ISO 50-1600 instear of 25-800. I figure I can't be the only person in the known universe who wants very much to shoot 1600 film in that thing.
🙂
There are a couple other things I'm wanting to do, but putting it off until I get the urge to take the thing apart again, such as finding out why the frame counter doesn't always count (it's usually like about 20 at the end of the roll) and more carefully checking the accuracy of the rangefinder. At 6' it seems very close, and at infinity it's off a very very very teensy bit, not enought to worry about.
Oh well, We learn more about this the more we do it, right?
🙂