sooner
Well-known
Hi folks,
Once again I have a Zorki 4k problem. Got one from russia, shot a test roll of film, rewound it and turned the rewind ring around the shutter button counterclockwise to the up or shooting position, but now the shutter won't cock or fire. Any ideas, did I do something wrong? Or is this just an incredibly finicky, i.e. poorly constructed, camera? This is my second problem camera, but buying a new one was cheaper than repair.
Any help would be appreciated. --John
Once again I have a Zorki 4k problem. Got one from russia, shot a test roll of film, rewound it and turned the rewind ring around the shutter button counterclockwise to the up or shooting position, but now the shutter won't cock or fire. Any ideas, did I do something wrong? Or is this just an incredibly finicky, i.e. poorly constructed, camera? This is my second problem camera, but buying a new one was cheaper than repair.
Any help would be appreciated. --John
sooner
Well-known
Come on, guys, no help out there this morning?
R
RichardS
Guest
I have a Zorki 4K and as far as I can see you haven't done anything wrong. With mine, I have to move the film advance lever about one and a half times to cock the shutter after having moved the rewind ring, but I assume you probably have done that by now. Sorry I can't be of any help.
Dick
Dick
sooner
Well-known
Thanks, Dick,
Yes, I did move the film advance lever several times, but obviously something is not engaging as it doesn't "catch" and neither the shutter advances nor the shutter button cocks. And here I was so excited to have a "working" Zorki!
Yes, I did move the film advance lever several times, but obviously something is not engaging as it doesn't "catch" and neither the shutter advances nor the shutter button cocks. And here I was so excited to have a "working" Zorki!
Peter Klein
Well-known
I was about to start my own thread, but this seems to be the same problem I had today.
I have a Zorki 4--not 4K, so it has a wind knob, not lever. This afternoon I had to change film. The same thing happened to me--after inserting the film and turning the rewind clutch back to the forward position, I wound it several turns and the shutter would not cock. The rewind knob was turning backwards, so film was advancing, but the shutter was not engaging at all.
I finally tried moving the shutter speed dial very slightly, and all of a sudden I felt the proper resistance, and the shutter cocked.
After reading this thread, I think I realize now what I did. I was shooting in the shade, and the shutter was set at 1/60. If I recall correctly, 1/60 is actually a "slow" speed on the Zorki 4--the slow speed gear train is engaged at that speed. Perhaps if you leave a slow speed engaged when you release the rewind clutch, it won't re-engage until you get the shutter out of slow speed mode.
The solution would be to always turn the camera to a fast speed--1/125 second or higher--just before rewinding.
Can anyone else confirm this?
--Peter
I have a Zorki 4--not 4K, so it has a wind knob, not lever. This afternoon I had to change film. The same thing happened to me--after inserting the film and turning the rewind clutch back to the forward position, I wound it several turns and the shutter would not cock. The rewind knob was turning backwards, so film was advancing, but the shutter was not engaging at all.
I finally tried moving the shutter speed dial very slightly, and all of a sudden I felt the proper resistance, and the shutter cocked.
After reading this thread, I think I realize now what I did. I was shooting in the shade, and the shutter was set at 1/60. If I recall correctly, 1/60 is actually a "slow" speed on the Zorki 4--the slow speed gear train is engaged at that speed. Perhaps if you leave a slow speed engaged when you release the rewind clutch, it won't re-engage until you get the shutter out of slow speed mode.
The solution would be to always turn the camera to a fast speed--1/125 second or higher--just before rewinding.
Can anyone else confirm this?
--Peter
Nickfed
Well-known
Peter Klein said:If I recall correctly, 1/60 is actually a "slow" speed on the Zorki 4--the slow speed gear train is engaged at that speed.
--Peter
While you may have fixed the problem, I'm sure this is not the reason. 1/60 is not a "slow" speed, it is a "fast" speed, as is 1/30. That is why cameras that don't have "slow" speeds still have 1/30, and therefore 1/60.
ChrisN
Striving
Hi Sooner
You might find some useful information in this thread
My camera is a Mir, like the Zorki 4 but without the slow shutter speeds.
Do the pins at the bottom of the sprocket drive line up like those in the photo? If not you may have the problem I described in the linked thread.
Good luck.
You might find some useful information in this thread
My camera is a Mir, like the Zorki 4 but without the slow shutter speeds.
Do the pins at the bottom of the sprocket drive line up like those in the photo? If not you may have the problem I described in the linked thread.
Good luck.
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