Benjamin Marks
Veteran
I have a Calumet shutter tester which is essentially a photo-sensor seated in a Bakelite housing. 9v battery and IC board on the inside. Ordinarily you put the photo-sensor end of the Bakelite box against the back of your shutter and a light source on the other side of the shutter and test away. It is a nifty device and works as well with between-the-lens shutters of LF or MF lenses as it does with focal plane shutters of 35mm cameras.
But what to do with a Leica IIIf? As the "back" of the shutter is not accessible without camera disassembly, use of this shutter tester poses a problem.
How about the following?
Slip a sheet of mylar large enough to cover the film gate into the IIIf and test the shutter from the front? I was thinking of positioning the shutter tester and light source at 45-degrees to the film plane.
Any reaction from you learned folks? A quick search revealed speculation about a sound-based solution. I am thinking about something simpler. What do you all think?
Ben Marks
But what to do with a Leica IIIf? As the "back" of the shutter is not accessible without camera disassembly, use of this shutter tester poses a problem.
How about the following?
Slip a sheet of mylar large enough to cover the film gate into the IIIf and test the shutter from the front? I was thinking of positioning the shutter tester and light source at 45-degrees to the film plane.
Any reaction from you learned folks? A quick search revealed speculation about a sound-based solution. I am thinking about something simpler. What do you all think?
Ben Marks