[pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- From: Mark Blackwell <markb1958@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: pure-silver@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2006 22:29:12 -0500
You are probably right its in the shutter that is in one of the lenses
and looks like you have narrowed it down. Just some good news. Its a
well known lens type that most camera repair people should be well
versed, it does not involve the glass, and repair parts are available.
May not be cheap, but lots cheaper than a replacement lens so keep the
chin up.
Janet Cull wrote:
OK, I did that and it advanced properly. If it weren't that the
lenses were so expensive, I'd say I'm enjoying the practical
troubleshooting I'm learning. I think it must be that the problem is
with that 150 mm lens that seemed to fail the other test. I hope it
can be fixed for not too much money.
Thank you, Frank, for taking the time to write such detailed
instructions! I really appreciate it - and when I take the camera to
Jimmy tomorrow I'll be proud to tell him I've already checked these
things. :o)
Janet
On Oct 29, 2006, at 12:53 AM, Frank Filippone wrote:
I realize that Janet may be driving off to wherever to get her camera
fixed, but let me ask her to try something…
Load a roll of old, out of date or otherwise really cheap and useless
film. It is going to be ruined, so don’t spend too much…
Go through your routine of loading. Before you mount the back on the
camera, pull the dark slide. Do you see film or do you see paper?
OK, you see film ( just like you are supposed to see….)
Mount the back. Do not pull the slide.
Cock camera and make exposure. Could you actually release the
shutter? ( remember, the dark slide is till in place, and that means
the shutter release should be disabled.)
OK, the camera would not release…
Pull the dark slide. Release the shutter. Without cocking the
shutter again, put in the dark slide and pull the back off the
camera. Mark the film with a felt tipped pen or a pencil. Make a
big X across the film. Replace the dark slide, put t he back on the
camera, cock the camera, and release the shutter again. Do not cock
the shutter, put in the dark slide, remove the back, pull the dark
slide and check the film…. You should see nothing. True? Put in
dark slide, mount back, cock shutter.
At this stage, you have checked out the camera light baffle shutter,
the lens shutter on both of your lenses, the winding on mechanism,
and the film movement. If this does NOT locate the problem, then you
must ask if you sent t he right rolls of film to the lab…. Could it
be you sent un exposed, new rolls in for processing?
If all this fails, then bring it to the repair guys to figure out the
problem….whatever it is is certainly either even more basic, or
really complex!
Frank Filippone
red735i@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:red735i@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
=============================================================================================================
To unsubscribe from this list, go to www.freelists.org and logon to your
account (the same e-mail address and password you set-up when you subscribed,)
and unsubscribe from there.
- References:
- [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- From: Frank Filippone
- [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- From: Janet Cull
Other related posts:
- » [pure-silver] another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- » [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
Thank you, Frank, for taking the time to write such detailed instructions! I really appreciate it - and when I take the camera to Jimmy tomorrow I'll be proud to tell him I've already checked these things. :o)
Janet
On Oct 29, 2006, at 12:53 AM, Frank Filippone wrote:
I realize that Janet may be driving off to wherever to get her camera fixed, but let me ask her to try something…
Load a roll of old, out of date or otherwise really cheap and useless film. It is going to be ruined, so don’t spend too much…
Go through your routine of loading. Before you mount the back on the camera, pull the dark slide. Do you see film or do you see paper?
OK, you see film ( just like you are supposed to see….)
Mount the back. Do not pull the slide.
Cock camera and make exposure. Could you actually release the shutter? ( remember, the dark slide is till in place, and that means the shutter release should be disabled.)
OK, the camera would not release…
Pull the dark slide. Release the shutter. Without cocking the shutter again, put in the dark slide and pull the back off the camera. Mark the film with a felt tipped pen or a pencil. Make a big X across the film. Replace the dark slide, put t he back on the camera, cock the camera, and release the shutter again. Do not cock the shutter, put in the dark slide, remove the back, pull the dark slide and check the film…. You should see nothing. True? Put in dark slide, mount back, cock shutter.
At this stage, you have checked out the camera light baffle shutter, the lens shutter on both of your lenses, the winding on mechanism, and the film movement. If this does NOT locate the problem, then you must ask if you sent t he right rolls of film to the lab…. Could it be you sent un exposed, new rolls in for processing?
If all this fails, then bring it to the repair guys to figure out the problem….whatever it is is certainly either even more basic, or really complex!
Frank Filippone red735i@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:red735i@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- From: Frank Filippone
- [pure-silver] Re: another blank roll
- From: Janet Cull