Yeah, film transport in folders is a thorny topic.Thanks for the responses all. I think anything to do with lens elements is going to be beyond me, especially since I have no way of knowing what they should actually look like. I'm also reluctant to mess around with any sort of disassembly at the moment, since I have a trip coming up in two weeks and don't want to screw the camera up and wind up not bringing it. The misalignment isn't bad enough to take that sort of risk, methinks.
Film flatness is definitely a possibility, as is the pressure plate. I have some digital calipers (the shape of which makes it really hard to measure many aspects of the camera), and though it's not easy to get an accurate measurement on the pressure plate thanks to its springy nature, it does seem to be slightly out of whack. Possibly as much as 1mm shallower on the right side than the left. I would have figured, though, that this wouldn't really matter since the springs would force it to conform to the film rails anyway?
Yeah, film transport in folders is a thorny topic.
Beginning to bend things, is really drastic and should be avoided, unless you are absolutely sure what you are doing and are ready to lose the camera.
It's very hard to reverse bending and easy to overdo. And it might turn out to not have been the problem at all.
Under any circumstance, don't rush anything to get the camera to a deadline. It's never coming back if you break it. And you'll kick yourself in the butt forever.
Stop down on the trip, use a flash and/or fast film indoors. You'll get sharper photos and plenty shallow DoF even at f8 (if that's what you're after).
How sure are you that the ailment is reoccurring?
Yup, not touching anything at the moment, and probably ever. I am going to try a little plastic shim and set up a big sheet parallel to the camera for some test shots. By the way, how does one go about diagnosing and fixing a pressure plate issue?
Hmm...somewhat. I'm fairly sure that the ailment exists, but I'm not sure how consistently serious it is. If you take a look at some of these test-ish shots, it ranges from fairly extreme: https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51329272576/sizes/o/ , https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51538676667/sizes/o/
To "not too bad" : https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51540388420/sizes/o/ , https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51540399080/sizes/o/
To "there, but not particularly noticeable" : https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51539472241/sizes/o/ , https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51538696217/sizes/o/
Interesting, right?
You need to take the classic image of a brick wall on high resolution film to say anything for certain.
The left example is from the extreme edge of the film plane and the other a bit further in. Grass and leaves are also a bit more ambiguous too WRT contrast. Both due to the diffuse lighting and the colours that are quite close.I think they're all a bit topographically hard to figure out! The railroad fence is definitely the obvious candidate, though.
View attachment 286799
Focus was on the bush in the center of the shot. Either f/5.6 or f/8, I don't remember. The tree on the left is quite a bit closer than the cars on the right, but the cars on the right are in nearly perfect focus and the tree is way out.
View attachment 286797
View attachment 286798
And the light leaks are actually reflections! The inner frame of the film gate is painted a not-matte-enough black, which I'm attempting to remedy.
Franky I can't see a whole lot wrong in the sample photos, things are just too ambiguous.
I was referring however to this photo:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51540388420/sizes/k/
The light leaks looks very much like a film edge leak. Not like something that happened in camera.
The edge of the film gate would not really have a chance of creating that kind of pattern.
The anti halation dye of the film would take care of that kind of reflection from anything parallel to the film plane.
And a shiny surface parallel to the projected light would not create that kind of wavy, peaky pattern.
Another possibility uneven development. The left edge is lighter in tone than the center or right.I was referring however to this photo:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/12802682@N00/51540388420/sizes/k/
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?