Hi, had a strange thing happen on Sunday and wonder if any of you Old Canon FD warriors could shed any light.
I’ve recently acquired a New Canon F1 (the electromechanical hybrid one) from Japan through the time portal roulette wheel that is eBay.
I’m due to drive to Austria on Friday for 3 or 4 weeks mountain activities over Christmas which is an annual thing for us being an Anglo-Austrian household.
It occurred to me that the F1 would be perfect (rugged and with mechanical speeds and a good low temp design spec) for packing on ski tours.
Miraculously last Sunday it got very cold here and I loaded up the old canon and set out in -3 to photograph the frost in London Fields (naturally planning to end the walk in a warm pub somewhere). Things seemed to go pretty well, the meter is a bit off but I had my sekonic and the shutter sounded like it was responding ok to speed changes low to high. After about an hour and a half I got to a local east end flower market and I noticed that the shutter sounded as if it was slowing down. I was shooting at about 1/250 but to my ear it sounded about 1/30 or 1/60. I dropped out the film. De mounted the lens and quick fired the shutter at a range of speeds. This seemed to cure the issue.
When I got home I developed the negs and bizarrely the shots I’d fired when it sounded like the shutter was slowing were well exposed like the earlier shots. Googling the issue I discovered that to actually force the shutter into manual mode you actually have to drop out the battery (which I hadn’t previously known - I just assumed the shutter went mechanical for 1/125 and faster)……. This left me puzzled as to causality……
- the camera itself was VERY cold….but it’s designed for that right?
- I’ve heard that cold temp can badly effect 4LR44 batts and assumed that that might have impacted the electronic shutter speeds
- because the exposures looked ok I’m assuming that the shutter was firing correctly but maybe the mirror was sticking a little…..
- in the warm at home I can’t replicate the issue so I’m now in a dilemma about whether to take the beast or not…… the images were lovely (I have a great 50mm 1.4 and a good 24mm 2.8)…..so any thoughts would gratefully received……I’m brand new using this Canon - I normally shoot with a couple of inherited mechanical leicas but I’m finding slr’s easier to focus than ragefinders these days!
Regards and seasons greetings all, I’ve attached some shots from london fields
I’ve recently acquired a New Canon F1 (the electromechanical hybrid one) from Japan through the time portal roulette wheel that is eBay.
I’m due to drive to Austria on Friday for 3 or 4 weeks mountain activities over Christmas which is an annual thing for us being an Anglo-Austrian household.
It occurred to me that the F1 would be perfect (rugged and with mechanical speeds and a good low temp design spec) for packing on ski tours.
Miraculously last Sunday it got very cold here and I loaded up the old canon and set out in -3 to photograph the frost in London Fields (naturally planning to end the walk in a warm pub somewhere). Things seemed to go pretty well, the meter is a bit off but I had my sekonic and the shutter sounded like it was responding ok to speed changes low to high. After about an hour and a half I got to a local east end flower market and I noticed that the shutter sounded as if it was slowing down. I was shooting at about 1/250 but to my ear it sounded about 1/30 or 1/60. I dropped out the film. De mounted the lens and quick fired the shutter at a range of speeds. This seemed to cure the issue.
When I got home I developed the negs and bizarrely the shots I’d fired when it sounded like the shutter was slowing were well exposed like the earlier shots. Googling the issue I discovered that to actually force the shutter into manual mode you actually have to drop out the battery (which I hadn’t previously known - I just assumed the shutter went mechanical for 1/125 and faster)……. This left me puzzled as to causality……
- the camera itself was VERY cold….but it’s designed for that right?
- I’ve heard that cold temp can badly effect 4LR44 batts and assumed that that might have impacted the electronic shutter speeds
- because the exposures looked ok I’m assuming that the shutter was firing correctly but maybe the mirror was sticking a little…..
- in the warm at home I can’t replicate the issue so I’m now in a dilemma about whether to take the beast or not…… the images were lovely (I have a great 50mm 1.4 and a good 24mm 2.8)…..so any thoughts would gratefully received……I’m brand new using this Canon - I normally shoot with a couple of inherited mechanical leicas but I’m finding slr’s easier to focus than ragefinders these days!
Regards and seasons greetings all, I’ve attached some shots from london fields
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