Where to Repair Zorki 4K Diopter Adjustment

akptc

Shoot first, think later
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The diopter adjustment lever (#9 i n the image below) on my Zorki 4K has gone out whack. When moved to any position other then "parked", it produces a blurry image in the VF. There is no way I would ever try to fix anything this small myself.

What would be a good place to send the camera to have it fixed? Or would I be better off cost-wise just getting a "new" one one? Thanks in advance for any suggestions.

i-rJHGsVV-M.jpg
 
Completely agree with Nikos72.
This is your opportunity to realize you really can repair a camera. There are even more resources (than the one given by Nikos72) on the net that walk you through disassembly/reassembly, and repair. And, if you botch it up, you will still be money ahead when you simply buy a new (to you) Zorki. Save your broken one for parts or another go at repair in the future.

I would not hesitate to open up the Zorki and repair the diopter lever link, although I realize I have had a few years' experience doing such things. Still, I had to start somewhere (probably with a Zorki, no actually it was a Fed3).

Go slowly, work at a location where you can stop and leave everything to sit undisturbed while you seek help for a given problem. RFF now hosts the old Classic Camera Repair forum, complete with archive, which is an amazing resource. I would have been hopelessly lost years ago (in term of camera repair, my wife still thinks I'm "lost") without the CCR forum. If I remember correctly, a chap named Rick Oleson was particularly helpful. My guess is he's still around and still helpful.
Dive in!
 
If all that's wrong with it is the dioptre lever, it's unlikely to be a complicated fix. Getting the top cover off is straightforward and covered in the first part of the How-To thread. Once that's off, the dioptre mechanics are easy to get at and simple enough that the problem should be obvious.
 
hm....I've lubed quite some diopters and in order to get it right you should take off the rangefinder completely - however that is not easy if you've never serviced a Zorki by yourself.
 
hm....I've lubed quite some diopters and in order to get it right you should take off the rangefinder completely - however that is not easy if you've never serviced a Zorki by yourself.

That's kind of my fear here.. small, moving parts with glass.. that have to align just so..

I found a local Zorki collector this weekend, who I think might - if properly bribed :) - attempt to fix the diopter for me. I will report on the end result.
 
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