So, I've just finished work on a GSN (one that I mentioned on APUG a few days ago). I installed a new pad in the sneaky fashion (manoeuvring it in on the end of a needle &c.) without pulling off the lens assembly. Having got the camera back together, it exhibits the following behaviors (while dry firing, indoors). Which of these seems correct and which incorrect? (I've read the manual & Col. Moran's photo.net testing page, but not sure of these things) :
1. Shutter release button does not stay depressed after it has been pressed. (Before pad replacement, shutter button often stayed down, only popping back up when I would wind on.)
2. Winding on makes a considerable "THOCK!" noise every time, which it did not before the pad replacement. (Win! -- I think. This is the new pad in action, right?)
3. When I depress the shutter release halfway, in an underexposed situation, I get the yellow light only at that halfway-depressed point. As I press further down toward the shutter actuating, the light goes out.
4. If the camera has been wound on (so, shutter is cocked), and I create an overexposed situation (say, pointing the camera into an overhead light at ASA 1000 and f/1.7), then the red light comes on without me touching the shutter release button at all. If I depress the shutter release past halfway, then the light goes out before I reach bottom and actuate the shutter (much as the underexposure light does).
5. In all cases, I have to press the shutter release as far down as possible, absolutely bury it, to actuate the shutter. It has a little bit of lag (like a modern digital P&S) between my burying it and the shutter opening.
By the way, all this is with a fresh modern 6V battery in a spacer sleeve. It's a well-made sleeve of my creation (if I may say so myself!) and the contacts are very stable. (Holding in the battery test button for 10 seconds gives a solid 10 seconds of the green light; the battery is not wobbling in and out of contact or anything like that.)
Finally, can I just say I've never seen so much perished material in one camera. The POD was complete goo and tiny bits. The light seals were sticky crumbs. A foam spacer below the rewind knob (under the camera top) disintegrated when touched. Even the tiny foam between the two LEDs for the over- and under-exposure lights, and that between the red and yellow arrow panels on the inside of the camera top, were crap. This job consumed all sorts of Jon Goodman materials.
Thanks for any opinions!
--Dave