Well, I got a roll back so I can answer somethings more completely!
If it exposes and focuses well, I'd just enjoy it as-is; no Contax I've ever had did those 2 things.
Seems I got lucky, the in-focus photos are focused where I intended to focus at various distances. Only when I missed focus because I was trying to shoot something with little thought did I mess up entirely. And the exposure was good enough that everything, even the very slow stuff, came out fine. Not bad for nearly 90 years old!
A little vinegar can't hurt. Just on a q-tip. Since the camera has clearly been in a not-great environment, I would expect a shutter ribbon to break soon. If you can use it at the higher speeds, that's great. Check the rangefinder by seeing if it matches with the lens at infinity. If the patch is responsive over the travel of the lens, and it matches at infinity, it's probably good enough to use.
The 50 1.5 is an excellent lens. I consider mine to be one of the best lenses I have - but I kinda hate using a Contax...
Shutter ribbon? Break?? It's crazy how they made these sturdy metal bodies and yet one part here or there of their delicate clockwork can just explode when you least expect it.
Now with some examples I can say the rangefinder is accurate to low quality lab scan precision!
Worth noting that for a Contax II/III (or a Kiev 2 or 3, which are near-exact copies), the entire curtain runs slower at speeds below 1/50 -- that is, instead of just delaying the second curtain, the whole mechanism is slowed.
So is that a reflection of how the curtains travel "in slow motion", the slower speeds? If I see the 2nd curtain move a certain way relative to the 1st, would that happen in fast motion the same? Because the slower speeds seemed distinct, I heard the whirr (which I suppose was normal), but it seemed to last for so long even for the not-so-slow speeds of 1/50 and 1/25.
As suggested, a dry toothbrush and toothpicks,
Or careful wipe-downs with q-tips and alcohol.
For cleaning brushed chrome surfaces I found that ceramic stove top cleaner works great. But it will get into all the nooks and crannies if you're not careful.
Echoing the experiences of breaking shutter straps on the Contax II/III. If they are still the original ones from the 1930s, they will break sooner rather than later
Maybe I should get some masking tape before trying any of that! The closest thing I have on hand to a polish is BKF, but I never tried using it finely.
WHAT ARE THESE FIENDISH STRAPS WHY DID THEY PUT THEM THERE? DON'T THEY KNOW I'M TRYING TO USE IT 87 YEARS LATER!! Do you mean the metal slats? Or is there a separate thing that is some kind of actual strap made out of a cloth-y material somewhere??
There was a period during the war when Leitz had bodies and no lenses. Some Zeiss lenses were adapted to L39 for that reason. There were probably other demands for a f1.5 lens. Assuming this lens is genuine, it's an early one from that time (1941). The serial number dates from 1941 -
less than a 1000 higher than this 85mm Sonnar confirmed adapted lens. And this lens is coated - although there's not much of it there....
Errr, I hope I didn't rub it off... I used this Kodak lens cleaning solution and a microfiber cloth. Looking at the photos, unless it's the mediocre 2MP minilab scans and the Fuji 400 I used playing a part, yeah the contrast isn't the best sometimes. But I'm not sure what else the coating is meant to improve. I do see a slight glow around some peoples' light shirts in the sun a couple times, but I don't have any outright flares it seems. I only shot a few photos directly towards the bright sky and yet I only see a glow emanating around it some.
I had a go with saddle soap on the leather and maybe I'm not using it right. The part I tested ended up a tad drier and less bumpy looking, with a bit less luster. Quite a bit of black came off. Maybe cleaning leather is supposed to look like that, I know cleaning the leather earcups yields yucky residue that is also very dark, but I'd just like to be more sure that I'm doing it correctly.
While shooting I got a bit ballsy towards the end and decided to try shooting a whole dozen shots around a campfire, which my phone's light meter said came to 1/5 or 1/2 sec wide open. Let me just say that wasn't my brightest idea. I had expected an uneven exposure over the frame due to the way the shutter movement looked to me, the 2nd curtain starting faster and slowing down, but the exposures look entirely consistent!
I have another roll I sent in a week ago (to a different lab) that I'm waiting to get the results back from. I shot it in more-favorable light over the course of the whole roll. And hopefully with better scans!