If the film doesn't stop at the expected point at No. 1, you may have a
psychological memory position for the forward wind angle, go to that point and
back again, the film will wind on approximately the correct distance and the
shutter will be cocked.
I used that principle with my SL66 when I put a roll of 35mm film through it.
It ran past the 24 frame number for 220 film and I had to estimate for the last
few frames.
Good luck
John W
Get Outlook for Android<https://aka.ms/AAb9ysg>
________________________________
From: rollei_list-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <rollei_list-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on
behalf of Craig Roberts <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2022 6:53:45 PM
To: rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [rollei_list] Re: Inadvertently hit 120/220 switch
LOL (at myself). At first I thought Steve had accidentally changed the input
voltage of his Rollei. I was baffled 😯.
All the best,
Craig
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 14, 2022, at 11:10, STEPHEN DUNN <bicycle551@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello all,
I made a mistake and pushed the little 120/220 switch. As intended it
immediately set the exposure counter to '0'.
The roll of film is 120 and it had about 4-5 exposures. I understand, if
continuing to use the roll, the gap between them will or might be affected. Is
this so or can I use the roll until it is finished? Is there a way to know
when it is completed?
Or just give up and remove the roll and start with another?
Best Regards,
Steve