Peter de Waal
Established
I've yet to see a foam that doesn't eventually crumble. You may have seen older cameras or worked with cine equipment that's sealed with yarn and velvet tape. Here are some instructions for the old-school method:
http://photo.net/classic-cameras-forum/00SVtt
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The non-foam method also has the advantage of costing only a few cents per camera in materials. This method takes a while to master. You may want to do a few test pieces on a wrecked body. With practice you can complete a camera in 30-60 minutes depending on the anatomy of the film door. Cameras like Nikkormat's have a drop-out film cassette in a 'D' shaped channel. It's a little trickier to get the wool yarn into this 'D'-shaped channel, so you have to glue down each leg of the 'D' separately and wait for it to dry. Such bodies take about an hour with practice.
Good luck with whatever method you choose.
http://photo.net/classic-cameras-forum/00SVtt
If you are a photo.net member, log-in and the article appears as a single page when you hit 'refresh'. This makes it easy to save as a single .pdf file.
The non-foam method also has the advantage of costing only a few cents per camera in materials. This method takes a while to master. You may want to do a few test pieces on a wrecked body. With practice you can complete a camera in 30-60 minutes depending on the anatomy of the film door. Cameras like Nikkormat's have a drop-out film cassette in a 'D' shaped channel. It's a little trickier to get the wool yarn into this 'D'-shaped channel, so you have to glue down each leg of the 'D' separately and wait for it to dry. Such bodies take about an hour with practice.
Good luck with whatever method you choose.