e_asphyx
Member
Most soviet cameras have a very annoying feature, a fixed (hard) slit, which (almost, but that's another irrelevant story) doesn't widen as curtains travel across the frame to compensate for an acceleration. This leads to inevitably uneven exposure on speeds above 1/100th of a second. It's done by making the second curtain cam (tab) to catch the first curtain cam. So instead of overrunning the tab the cam bumps into it pushing forward. So effectively the first curtain drags the second one at a fixed distance behind. Why it was done is unknown, presumably to simplify the assembly process by making the shutter virtually insensitive to the second curtain spring tension.
I should admit that the worth of this modification is disputable. Think of it as an experiment.
The old down-faced cam was ground off leaving just a registration pin and the new cam about 1.4 mm in thickness was made from brass and silver-soldered above the old one:


Now the cam passes far above the latch so the new one with an elevated bump (slide) was made. The thick part is 4mm and the thin one is about 1.4mm, almost like the original latch. Again, made from brass and silver soldered to the original axle.

How it looks assembled:


In addition the axle was shortened by about 1mm to make the latch catch the tab more reliably (I discovered that the first curtain gets released slightly before the latch came into plane of the tab so if you press the button slowly enough the shutter may misfire).
As a consequence the 1/500 speed is non functional but all other speeds are pretty close to spec if adjusted properly.
I should admit that the worth of this modification is disputable. Think of it as an experiment.
The old down-faced cam was ground off leaving just a registration pin and the new cam about 1.4 mm in thickness was made from brass and silver-soldered above the old one:


Now the cam passes far above the latch so the new one with an elevated bump (slide) was made. The thick part is 4mm and the thin one is about 1.4mm, almost like the original latch. Again, made from brass and silver soldered to the original axle.

How it looks assembled:


In addition the axle was shortened by about 1mm to make the latch catch the tab more reliably (I discovered that the first curtain gets released slightly before the latch came into plane of the tab so if you press the button slowly enough the shutter may misfire).
As a consequence the 1/500 speed is non functional but all other speeds are pretty close to spec if adjusted properly.
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