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Canon cough

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colin wells

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Anyone know if the Canon FTB suffers from the same Canon cough as the A series .
 
No, it does not. It's a symptom of the mirror governor needing lubrication.
 
The FTB does, however, suffer from shutter capping/bounce. If you're looking at purchasing one, run a test roll at the higher shutter speeds. I have two now and neither will operate properly above a 60th of a second. About half the frame gets exposed and the rest is blank. Too bad; they are nice, well-built cameras.
 
Hi Fred couldn't you install some foam to stop the bounce
 
Shutter bounce is where one of the curtains bounces back, either when opening or closing. A lot of horizontal shutter curtain cameras can suffer from it. I've had a Nikon F2 and an F that did it. The F2 had curtain bounce on the opening curtain, so it'd leave a black line on the edge. The F had closing curtain bounce, so there'd be an overexposed line on one edge. It might be easily fixable. The capping issue is likely a curtain balance issue. That usually is very easy to solve.

-J
 
Not remembering if they're the same or not.
They used a leather pad running in a curved SS piece. If you lost the pad it bounced pretty good.
Sometimes you could find the pad somewhere in the transport. lightly chewed up.
 
I have two FTBn bodies and neither ( SO FAR !! ) suffers from 'shutter bounce' -- I took off the base-plates and touched a minute amount of oil into the various pivots and cogs that I could see moving and they both wind on 'sweetly' now after no service since the 1970's .
 
I have two FTBn bodies and neither ( SO FAR !! ) suffers from 'shutter bounce' -- I took off the base-plates and touched a minute amount of oil into the various pivots and cogs that I could see moving and they both wind on 'sweetly' now after no service since the 1970's .
I have an FTb that works perfectly, but I'll take your advice and give the moving parts a smidgen of oil. The stuff sold on ebay for servicing model railway locomotives is good, it's very light machine oil in a kind of hypodermic syringe in a pen. Just the job for mechanical cameras, as it puts as little as a 1mm dot exactly where its needed. Costs around a fiver.
 
None of the "F" or T series Canon cameras suffer from the "Canon Cough", only the "A" series do.
 
Last edited:
blockend -- thanks for that -- I wondered where they got those syringes with a needle and the oil !
 
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