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Camera Repair as a Hobby: Generalist vs. Specialist

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I'm still very early in my camera repair learnings, but the primary motivation is to simply bring back old cameras back into working form. Already though I do realise if I want to take it past a relaxing hobby - and a way of getting cameras I'm interested in on the cheap - there's a need to specialise. Not just knowledge and experience, but tooling, materials and spares. One can't be Sover Wong for every camera under the sun.

What that'll be remains to be seen, presumably the middle point between "what I'm interested in", "what people want fixed and are willing to pay for" and "what I'm good at." ;-)

Somewhat ironically, my interest in camera repair was spurned by my interest in watching mechanical watch repair... I certainly didn't need another hobby, but saw it as a way of extending and serving an existing one. Cameras have the advantage of having much bigger internals, but much much more variance in design and function. Mechanical watches, on the other hand, all work and go together in much similar ways.
 
I am a generalist, and I service cameras which seem interesting, often just a single example, and I am satisfied.

More recently, I've sought out cameras which have a certain charm, or which have a more unusual design, such as a mirror box which also acts as the shutter (Exa 1A, Lomography Konstruktor, et al)
 
Somewhat ironically, my interest in camera repair was spurned by my interest in watching mechanical watch repair... I certainly didn't need another hobby, but saw it as a way of extending and serving an existing one. Cameras have the advantage of having much bigger internals, but much much more variance in design and function. Mechanical watches, on the other hand, all work and go together in much similar ways.
That's interesting. I also used to watch a lot of these videos (Wristwatch Revival, Chronoglide Watchmakers, Nekkid Watchmaker, etc.) since I'm into mechanical watches for a long time. Inspired by this, I tried to get into watch repair, starting with pocket watches. But although their movements are bigger than those of wristwatches, more patients died on the table than not. And, oh boy, so much tools and materials needed and the stuff is expensive. I realized that I would have to go all-in to become better in this trade and finally gave up. I was not willing to allow a single hobby to occupy all my spare time.

The good thing is: I can reuse quite a number of tools and materials I acquired for watchmaking also for camera repair. Screwdrivers, tweezers, eye loupes, greases, oils.
 
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