Vickko
Veteran
Perhaps try this:
- screw the 100mm tube in, so that the brass threads do not show.
- loosen the three screws on the 100mm cam and move the cam (and follower) until you achieve focus.
- then tighten the three screws.
Now see if the 100mm maintains focus through the enlargement range.
- screw the 100mm tube in, so that the brass threads do not show.
- loosen the three screws on the 100mm cam and move the cam (and follower) until you achieve focus.
- then tighten the three screws.
Now see if the 100mm maintains focus through the enlargement range.
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
dear vickko, i feel really stupid now
...do you mean the screws that I show on picture? sorry for my stupid question
Vickko
Veteran
Yes, loosen the 3 screws that you show in the photo, that hold the 100mm cam in place.
Then move the cam until you achieve proper focus with the 100mm lens, then tighten the screws.
Then check for autofocus action.
Then move the cam until you achieve proper focus with the 100mm lens, then tighten the screws.
Then check for autofocus action.
Rangefinderfreak
Well-known
When I compare the picture of your Focomat cam to mine, it seems the cams are positioned about right ( The middle screw in the middle of the opening slot) The lens thread in the barrell is WAY OFF... At least 5mm or more too much out. I guess you have to check the bowden, the movement of the sliding lens board and then the focus. I guess somebody has tried to make very small enlargements and shifted the lens exessively to focus near...Don`t touch the cam before you have verified these points first.
M.Hilo
Established
Lukas, nice puzzle !
I agree with Rangefinderfreak and would not touch the cam before you know what to do with it.
Going way back to your nr. 2 issue: have you pulled that knurled head out? I just noticed that the difference between it pulled out and pushed in is this: when pulled out the 100mm's wheel runs nicely over the cam and the bellows folds out fine. When pushed in this wheel hardly touches the cam and subsequently the bellows hardly moves . . . just making sure.
If you don't solve it, I can call a friend who worked as a repairman for Leitz all his life. He services my Focomats (Netherlands) . . .
I agree with Rangefinderfreak and would not touch the cam before you know what to do with it.
Going way back to your nr. 2 issue: have you pulled that knurled head out? I just noticed that the difference between it pulled out and pushed in is this: when pulled out the 100mm's wheel runs nicely over the cam and the bellows folds out fine. When pushed in this wheel hardly touches the cam and subsequently the bellows hardly moves . . . just making sure.
If you don't solve it, I can call a friend who worked as a repairman for Leitz all his life. He services my Focomats (Netherlands) . . .
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
dear darkroomers, i followed all your advices. As vickko wrote I changed the setup of 100mm cam, loosen 3 big screws and moved with the middle part (i put small green circle on my image above here)...i understand the mechanism now. But as much as i hard tried i never could get proper AF with 100mm lens. I was almost there but it was never perfect. anyhow everytime when i focused i saw the golden thread in barrel.I think Rangefinderfreak is right, its too much way off...when I screw the lens inside the barrel, so i do not see golden thread, i am so much out of focus, that even moving the part (green circle on the picture above) from on side to another cant help. is there way how to put thread in the barrell and have lens focused??? thank 100000x times!
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
dear machiel, yes, knurled head is out as it should be...60mm works just fine so I would guess, that problem is really somewhere between "barrell threads" and "adjusting 100mm cam" to right position.
UPDATE: i just found this picture on internet, so may be, that to see golden barrell threads on lens is ok? the barrell looks very similar to mine when i focus
UPDATE: i just found this picture on internet, so may be, that to see golden barrell threads on lens is ok? the barrell looks very similar to mine when i focus

Rangefinderfreak
Well-known
If your "Distance slot" is in the third position from right (0), it is also way off. It is the repro position. My Focomat is using the first (less any frame) or second ( one centimeter frame) position That makes two centimetres difference in the focusing distance...
Vickko
Veteran
I suppose one obvious question is:
"Is there an easel on the baseboard? Is it the correct easel?
"Is there an easel on the baseboard? Is it the correct easel?
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
If your "Distance slot" is in the third position from right (0), it is also way off. It is the repro position. My Focomat is using the first (less any frame) or second ( one centimeter frame) position That makes two centimetres difference in the focusing distance...
all the time I had it on third position as someone wrote above...no, i am not using any easel....
now i am solving another issue
M.Hilo
Established
If your "Distance slot" is in the third position from right (0), it is also way off. It is the repro position. My Focomat is using the first (less any frame) or second ( one centimeter frame) position That makes two centimetres difference in the focusing distance...
To me, if no easel is being used, the 0 position in the middle seems correct when just projecting on the white ground board.
I have the 3cm Leitz easels and use the slot position on the far right (30mm)
But I can easily be wrong, it has happened many times before
Attachments
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
thank you for picture! this is what i needed! now just to find the FUSE..
M.Hilo
Established
thank you for picture! this is what i needed! now just to find the FUSE..
Again I could be wrong, but I do not remember a fuse. Could be that your 150 watt bulb has just died. Try another "any" bulb
If the problem happens again take apart the wiring in the lamphouse, the socket etc. . . . that being the most vulnerable . .
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
i tried another bulb, but no light there...
i will have to take apart lamphouse...thats what i was worried about..
thank you!
i will have to take apart lamphouse...thats what i was worried about..
thank you!
Vickko
Veteran
There is no electronics or fuse in the enlarger, as far as I can recall. The wiring is pretty simple, mostly under the baseboard. There is a wire that goes up the column.
Yes, you may need to rewire it.
There may be a couple switches, and with an explosion, the contacts may now be burned, and replaced.
Good luck
Yes, you may need to rewire it.
There may be a couple switches, and with an explosion, the contacts may now be burned, and replaced.
Good luck
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
vickko, machiel, rangefinderfreak, tom A, thank you for your help...when i finish rewiring i will come back with calibration of 100mm lens! i will not give up
thank you one more time..really appreciate it! lukas
Rangefinderfreak
Well-known
If there was an explosion, your bulb shorted, that blew some of the wiring or switches. I recommend make a new wire to lamphouse/bulb base and forget all other wiring. that wire you connect to your exposure clock and that`s it !
lukas.erba@gmail.com
Member
dear rangerfinderfreak, you mention exposure clock. when i open plastic cover beneath the baseboard I find two white sockets (one is for bulb, second probably for exposure clock?) and I have one cable comming from lamphouse/bulb. does it matter which socket i use for contecting wire from lamphouse/bulb? or are they interconnected, so i can you both of them? thank you
Tom A
RFF Sponsor
The interior wiring in the column is prone to break up with age. I had an old Iic that shorted out in the column - interesting experience! The wiring is probably the old cloth covered one and with age it dries out and "cracks".Just running the wire from the light housing to the timer bypasses the column and you can use modern insulated power cords instead. remember that a dark room is usually a place of high humidity and power tends to look for a way out - and of course the operator is a good target for grounding!
I am experimenting with modern high power LED bulbs at the moment. So far the most powerful are 60 watts- but I am looking for some 100 watt power ones. The LED have a "hesitancy" when turned on - just a split second - but they go on with instant full power and are of course much cooler so you can leave them on without turning the housing hot. I need to test a bit more - finding the correct height of the fixture and also the "colour" of the light. So far I have been using them on the Ic - but onces I have determined what works there, I will start with the Iic.
I am experimenting with modern high power LED bulbs at the moment. So far the most powerful are 60 watts- but I am looking for some 100 watt power ones. The LED have a "hesitancy" when turned on - just a split second - but they go on with instant full power and are of course much cooler so you can leave them on without turning the housing hot. I need to test a bit more - finding the correct height of the fixture and also the "colour" of the light. So far I have been using them on the Ic - but onces I have determined what works there, I will start with the Iic.
M.Hilo
Established
What Rangefinderfreak writes makes sense! The safest (and easiest) is to run a new wire directly to a timer. You can do this bypassing the column, or through the column. The only thing you will lose is the functioning of the switch on the side of the baseboard. But to be honest I have never used that switch. One uses a timer.
Another way to go is to check carefully all the wiring. To me it is still probable that the short happened inside the lamphead's socket. Start by just replacing the wiring from the lamphead to the column. You have a good chance that'll solve the problem. The only other place I would check at the same time is inside that external switch on the side of the board . . .
Here we can buy electrical cord for ironing machines (for clothes) - it is almost the same as what Leitz used for their enlargers . . .
Another way to go is to check carefully all the wiring. To me it is still probable that the short happened inside the lamphead's socket. Start by just replacing the wiring from the lamphead to the column. You have a good chance that'll solve the problem. The only other place I would check at the same time is inside that external switch on the side of the board . . .
Here we can buy electrical cord for ironing machines (for clothes) - it is almost the same as what Leitz used for their enlargers . . .
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