Field
Well-known
No that is a great idea!
b1bmsgt
Yeah, I still use film...
Just FYI...
I have cleaned literally hundreds of Electro rangefinders with a Q-Tip and a 50/50 solution of peroxide and ammonia. I have never had a problem with the beamsplitter coating coming off. Of course, be gentle with it, but I have yet to destroy one.
I tried the same thing with a Canonette QL17 GIII, and it came off with one pass... :bang:
Russ
I have cleaned literally hundreds of Electro rangefinders with a Q-Tip and a 50/50 solution of peroxide and ammonia. I have never had a problem with the beamsplitter coating coming off. Of course, be gentle with it, but I have yet to destroy one.
I tried the same thing with a Canonette QL17 GIII, and it came off with one pass... :bang:
Russ
Paolo Bonello
3 from 36 on a good day.
Here's another idea, buy some mirror like stickers like the ones for kids and rather than put a dirty looking black dot on your viewfinder put a small diamond of mirror sticker. you'd hardly see that from the outside.
Chinasaur
Well-known
... a 50/50 solution of peroxide and ammonia...
Russ
Sounds like a recipe for Hydrazine or SR-71 fuel
Chinasaur
Well-known
To the Yashica SME's out there...
If I took some rubber lens hood material..say about 2-4mm...and glued it around the eyepieces of my GX and CC...
Would it block the light like I want it to? Or just make a mess and fall off and not work?
If I took some rubber lens hood material..say about 2-4mm...and glued it around the eyepieces of my GX and CC...
Would it block the light like I want it to? Or just make a mess and fall off and not work?
Field
Well-known
I have not come up with a good idea yet for that. I have some ideas, but will get back to you. I think mounting might go well by using thin metal to insert behind the black plastic, then solder a ring to connect them... but what you attach to that I have not yet determined. I suppose you could use non-hardening clay to seal it.
Frontman
Well-known
You could always use an accessory finder and simply scale-focus your camera. I have an old Leica VIHOO finder that I use on my Barnack-type cameras (which have very squinty viewfinders) it works quite well.
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