Hi, this is my first post here.
I have just bought my first ever film camera, a Super Ikonta 530/2 with a Triotar lens. I did some digging online, but couldn't find a ton of information on dissasembing its lens for cleaning fungus and haze, what the seller of my camera said it has.
From what the seller says, the camera currently focuses correctly, and seems to work with no issue.
I must note that I have experience with fixing old sewing machines, and have the tools needed for dissasembly already bought, like a lens spanner, and hydrogen peroxide, etc...
Now to my very beginner level question:
Will have to take apart the focus ring and/or shutter in order to get all the elements out, and if so, would I have to recollimate the lens?
Is there a way to mark the front element/focus ring or whatever, before taking it off, so that I can reassemble it without issue?
Others will no doubt speak more knowledgeably on this. But first, I take it you haven't gotten the camera yet, so you have not actually checked out the lens. If that's correct, when you do, look through the lens to see just how bad it is -- it may be that the lens will take perfectly fine pictures with no cleaning whatsoever. You'd need to shoot a roll to evaluate that, of course. And you may need a lens shade to minimize the effects of haze or fungus. (And you may decide, reasonably, that you should clean it since it will be even better if clean. But my point simply is that this job maybe can wait.)
Shine a light through the lens to see if you can tell which lens element(s) have the haze and/or fungus. That will tell you how deep you need to go into the lens to clean it. You may well have to remove the front lens element by unscrewing from the lens. Sometimes, especially with older lenses like this one has, there are age-related problems with the lens coating that cleaning simply won't help.
You should also check infinity focus -- is the lens sharp when focused at infinity? Set the shutter to B and the aperture to its widest setting. Use a remote release to keep the shutter open. Then you'll need a ground glass to place at the film gate to check the sharpness of the image. You probably don't have a ground glass. Others may have suggestions (wax paper perhaps), but I have found that cellophane tape (like Scotch tape) with a matte surface -- which is what seems to me the standard finish these days -- can work really well since it has a fine grain. You'll need to stretch several strips tightly across the film gate, preferably in the center. It's a little trickier to do than it sounds but works well. Then use a loupe or magnifier to judge sharpness of a distant subject. If you can look at lettering, like on a sign, that's a helpful gauge.
If the lens is clearly out at infinity, then you'll need to adjust it. This is a front-cell focus lens, I assume (only the front element turns when focusing), as opposed to the whole lens block moving. If so, you will need to remove the front ring that has the distance markings on it. You will need a very small screwdriver to loosen the set screws on the ring -- there should be three -- to enable the ring to lift off. Go around and loosen each screw a turn or so at a time. You want to make sure the screw doesn't come completely off -- they're small and can be easily lost, and are a royal PITA to reattach. Keep testing the ring as you loosen the screws to see if it's ready to come off.
Once you remove it, the front element infinity focus can be adjusted. (Again, I'm assuming this is front-cell focusing.) Looking through the ground glass, turn the front element and watch carefully for where the lens is in sharpest focus at infinity. At that point, use a scribe or something sharp to mark a reference point on the lens thread at top dead center. If that's all you need to do -- that is, the lens doesn't need to be taken apart further for cleaning -- then reattach the front ring with the infinity mark lining up exactly with the focus index mark, and tighten those set screws. You are done.
Whether you adjust infinity focus or not, if you need to remove the front element to clean interior lens surfaces, carefully unscrew the front element after removing the front ring. Go slowly -- keep checking for when it comes free from the lens tube. You will need to mark that point on the lens thread also, at top dead center. (Maybe scribe two lines to not confuse it with the infinity mark.) If you don't mark this, then you can be in for a really tedious time. The front lens elements are quite frequently (always?) threaded with several threads, so you will not get proper focus unless you reattach the lens element using the right starting point. So make sure to do this.
I am on less steady ground about the interior lens surfaces, i.e. the middle and rear elements. I don't know whether the Triotar has the aperture in front of the middle element, or behind it. Most likely it's before the aperture, so you will need to look closely at how the middle element is held in place. I would expect there is some sort of lock ring, which will require a spanner wrench to remove. Go carefully -- you are getting down into the lens and you won't have much room to play with -- a slip could scratch the lens element. If you are successful in getting it out, make certain you know which lens surface faces front, and which faces the rear of the lens. You'll never get the lens focusing properly if you flip the middle element.
OK, if you need to clean the front of the rear lens element, you should be able to do so with the front two elements removed. Just be sure the aperture is wide open so you can get at that surface.
If the only surface needing cleaning is the front of the rear element, then look for a lock ring at the back of the lens that holds the rear element in place. Make sure it's the right one -- should be right adjacent to the lens surface. You need a spanner wrench for this. Be careful you don't loosen the lock ring that holds the whole lens assembly in place! (Disclaimer -- I'm going on general experience here; I don't know what your 530/2 looks like inside.) You will want to have the camera folded to remove the rear element -- much easier to do.
I very much hope this is helpful. And I also hope, as I said above, that if I've stated anything incorrectly, others will correct or clarify.