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Minolta SRT101

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mangorockfish

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Dug my old SRT101 out the other day, bought it new back in '72. Cocked the shutter and tried to fire it. No dice. Can't get the button to push down. Pushed the button on the bottom that opens the back when the film rewind knob is pulled up. Now the bottom button won't pop back out. Does this sound like a big repair bill and is the old camera worth fixing? Thanks
 
Could probably get a working one from an online seller for less than a repair. I had a few 70s era SLRS repaired about ten years ago and they were costing between $120 to $200 back then.

Stan
 
Dug my old SRT101 out the other day, bought it new back in '72. Cocked the shutter and tried to fire it. No dice. Can't get the button to push down. Pushed the button on the bottom that opens the back when the film rewind knob is pulled up. Now the bottom button won't pop back out. Does this sound like a big repair bill and is the old camera worth fixing? Thanks

maybe a good opportunity to learn camera repair.
 
Probably time to try clean and nudge it back to life. I recently got an old Canon FTB as part of larger kit, and the camera will not fire and mirror stuck. After opening the bottom plate and study how things might work, eventually I got it working by clearing old gunk and adding tiny bit of machine oil. Minolta SRT's are famous for their reliability, so you might be able to get it back to life by yourself. Start with some good YouTube repair videos about your model.
 
Yes I agree good time to try a DIY repair. Sometimes a tiny bit, like 1 or 2 drops of lighter fluid on mechanism will free up stuck gears.
I bet it's just old dried up grease and lack of lubrication.
 
Pushed the button on the bottom that opens the back when the film rewind knob is pulled up. Now the bottom button won't pop back out.

That button is the film rewind release. It'll stay depressed until the film is advanced again.

You can probably heartily swab the gears and levers under the bottom plate with lighter fluid to clean them out enough to get the camera to work. A working camera would be under $100. A repair would likely be more than $100 - plus shipping if you can't find someone close by.
 
Dug my old SRT101 out the other day, bought it new back in '72. Cocked the shutter and tried to fire it. No dice. Can't get the button to push down. Pushed the button on the bottom that opens the back when the film rewind knob is pulled up. Now the bottom button won't pop back out. Does this sound like a big repair bill and is the old camera worth fixing? Thanks

Likely some simple thing, like not having a lens on the body, having the preview stopped down, or the self timer activated, all things that can preven the shutter from releasing. Put on your thinking cap, do a little research onine about what prevents the shutter from releasing. DO NOT OIL ANYTHING.

You pull up on the rewind lever like on most cameras to open the back. Is there film in the camera? The film release button allows you to rewind the film, but does nothing to open the back. Download a manual for the camera online and find the conditions that prevent the shutter from firing, and go from there. No knee jerk frustrating reactions or stupid moves like lubricating anything.

Most likely is the self timer was activated and failed to complete a timing cycle, so the shutter is locked up awaiting that cycle to finish. If the self timer arm is not strait up and down, this is the problem. You can fix this by fully cocking the self timer, then releasing it by pushing that seperate little button, and then as the arm winds all the way up it may slow down and then stop, so gently push the arm the rest of the way while hearing the gears hum until the cycle finishes. Never use the self timer on these old cameras since this is a common problem due to the complicated timing mechanism locking up near the end of the cycle likely due to oil too stiff to work properly.

These are great cameras, you just forgot how to operate yours. Relax and take it easy before discarding, or throw it over to me if you like. This sounds like a zero repair bill until you learn how to use that camera again. Manual is too big for me to post here.
 
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These can usually be resolved by moving the stuck gear on the bottom of the camera. The problem is figuring out which gear is stuck. I'd suggest moving this thread over to the REPAIR Sub-FORUM. When you figure out what gear is stuck just use some Ronsonol.
 
I have a fleet of Minolta SRT cameras. Most recently I had one of them, an SRT 200, overhauled by John Titterington. He did a beautiful job, as usual. I hope to put some film into it later today. With what film costs now, it's nice to know you have a properly working camera.
 
When was the last time your SRT was used? How long has it had any air?
Gears-levers-knobs dry out, get stale over time if left to sit.
You need an overhaul that'll run you around atleast $150, and make sure you get a 6 month guarantee.
I still have yet to take my SRT 101 in and the guy will do it for me for $165.
Also, I bought a Minolta X-700 from the above John Titterington some years back so he's good, reliable
 
When was the last time your SRT was used?
Yesterday
How long has it had any air?
Mine sit out in the air all the time.
Gears-levers-knobs dry out, get stale over time if left to sit.
Well, get them out and use them.
You need an overhaul that'll run you around atleast $150, and make sure you get a 6 month guarantee.
You can do that if you like, but often not needed at all.
I still have yet to take my SRT 101 in and the guy will do it for me for $165.
You can do it yourself for less.
Also, I bought a Minolta X-700 from the above John Titterington some years back so he's good, reliable
I still have my old X700 I bought new and it works as well as ever, however, it sit on the shelf and doesn't get used as much as my SRT101's. It's impossible to use in metered manual mode, has plastic viewfinder screen that's hard to see, no mirror lock up which I need, poor position of shutter release cable requires a short cable release left in place, and many other gripes. I bought it after my SRT101 got stolen, and with no ebay, hard to replace. Also had two X370's that both had shutter failures within a few years of purchase. Not a fan of x series Minoltas.
 
The cable release on the LATER Minolta X cameras (not the XE, XK, XM) are a nuisance, for sure. And they lack the mirror lock up, except for the XK, XM. And the dead capacitor problem on the models make in China (the LATE models off the assembly line) is a big nuisance -- although they can be fixed for under $10 if you have a soldering iron.

I think the biggest problem is that they are battery dependent. At least Minolta had the sense to add a spare battery holder to each camera strap.

The good news is that there are several POST-Minolta models that were made in China that have shutters that are mechanical -- and some have speeds up to 1/2,000s.

http://www.subclub.org/minchin
 
The cable release on the LATER Minolta X cameras (not the XE, XK, XM) are a nuisance, for sure. And they lack the mirror lock up, except for the XK, XM. And the dead capacitor problem on the models make in China (the LATE models off the assembly line) is a big nuisance -- although they can be fixed for under $10 if you have a soldering iron.

I think the biggest problem is that they are battery dependent. At least Minolta had the sense to add a spare battery holder to each camera strap.

The good news is that there are several POST-Minolta models that were made in China that have shutters that are mechanical -- and some have speeds up to 1/2,000s.

http://www.subclub.org/minchin

X-700's - with a MECHANICAL shutter? I must be missing something here...??
Please elaborate....
 
The details are in the link. While there is not a exact Chinese copy of an X-700 with a mechanical shutter, there are copies of the Minolta X-370 with mechanical shutters, and a couple have 1/2,000 of a second. Some of those with mechanical shutters have TTL metering, but they do NOT have auto-exposure.

All totaled, the Chinese camera manufacturers made more SLR models -- with a Minolta lens mount -- than Minolta did. Minolta made many more SLR cameras, but the Chinese made more different models. Some are pretty rare:

vantag5minolta.jpg


seagulldf5000whitefront.jpg
 
Throw it out and buy another one, they are about 7 bucks these days.
 
Throw it out and buy another one, they are about 7 bucks these days.
False information helps no one regardless of having a prepared mind or not. I recently bought a nice SRT101 for $35 but I looked for quite a while for a really good deal on eBay and have the knowledge that helps recognize a good one. On average, excellent working SRT101's are $70 and over. Your order of magnitude exaggeration is not chance, it was on purpose. Defamation favors no one.
 
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