Thanks for the tip I will see if I can find a washer to stick in there. Im deffinetly using the timer correctly as long as it's the same as on my vx because that one works just fine. I am not opposed to opening it up but I've never worked on these cameras before. Is there any info about repair online somewhere just for reference before I go digging around in there?
Miles Upton wrote a manual for them. I haven't got a copy myself but I've heard it's pretty good. There is a bit of info on the web about them. A 35mm Exakta was covered in one of the Tomosy books. Not sure it contains enough detail to time the escapement gears from scratch. It's been a while since I read it but I'm pretty sure it doesn't, actually. In your case all is not lost though, quite the contrary.
There were a number of changes to features of the Exakta models over the years. Finder options for example. But the escapement set up stayed the same, or close enough, for a long time. And because of the unique body design with individual left and right top covers, it's actually pretty painless to expose the gears in question. And you have a good working example that sounds like it's set up correctly.
I actually managed to time my first IIa correctly from scratch without assistance. But, never having handled an Exakta before (let alone a correctly assembled one) it took quite a lot of contemplation and stripping, assembling and stripping again, before I got the mesh right.
If I'd had a correct one at hand I would have done what I'm suggesting you do, and had a look at it to work out what had to be moved, and when.
It's been a few years but I'm pretty sure that prior to removing the escapement setting knob the escapement has to be wound. Meaning that of course the shutter has to be cocked. I think your models should have the little rotating shutter button cover to avoid accidental release. This is where it will demonstrate its usefulness because you won't want to fire it as you are taking that top cover off so make good use of the release block. Take some digital images of set up as you go, noting the position the knob is set to. You might want to sacrifice a driver to taper the blade—being an Exakta of course the slot for the setting knob retaining screw is not flat, is it!
With the shutter cocked, the escapement wound, and it's setting noted (it's been a long time but try setting six seconds plus timer delay with main dial on B, Ie. the setting knob on the final click, first?) If unhelpful set to 1/5 or whatever the shortest delay speed is at the other end of the scale, but getting the timer delay *and* the slow speeds to *all* work was my challenge so perhaps start with that and try to get the timer function going?
OK: with the right top cover off and everything still cocked you may also, if needed, temporarily re-install the setting knob of the good example so you can wind and release it and observe the way the system works. This may assist.
Ultimately, though, you want to set the faulty example to exactly the same state as above, repeat the removal process for the top cover and then check the relationship between the gear under the knob with the (many) peg holes for the various timer and non-timer speeds to the other gear with the peg that will, as you'll observe, trip the mirror release and start the mechanism if it's properly timed.
The actual escapement itself is not very accessible below the interior plate these gears sit on. You'd have to pull the mechanism out of the body casing (from memory) to get good access to it. Not that this is particularly hard, but I don't think you'll probably need to go that far. Not for this issue, anyway. The Exakta speed escapements themselves are pretty reliable (as are the cameras in general *if* nobody has buggered around with them). My untouched-for-god-knows-how-long pre-war Kine isn't running perfectly (yet). It's trying to, though, and I can tell you it's basically only cleaning, lubrication and perhaps curtains (Ie all purely age-related issues) stopping it from going well. They usually want to work if they're clean, lubed and not tampered with. So the escapement itself is unlikely to be your problem (the speeds themselves may well run a bit slow, Eg. 12 seconds may be 14 or 16 but they'll likely be consistent and stable as found, and you can easily compensate for such long times). Hence the prob is most likely to be the incorrect assembly of the gears driven by the escapement, not the escapement itself.
The mesh of both gears and the position of the setting wheel are all important. What makes it such a tricky thing to set from scratch is that you can easily get some or most of the slow speeds going even with the timing badly off. It's how the professional repairer had installed mine. But: only one combination of gear timing will get the slow speeds and all the delay settings working right. It's like setting up many (but not all) overhead cam drives: the position of every gear is important.
Obviously I can't be definitive without seeing the camera involved. But from what you've told me: it smacks of the mechanism having been incompetently assembled by some numpty who wasn't paying attention to the correct orientation of the parts. Again, these were a good, reliable camera. Some threads were definitely undersized—they're not Nikon F-bulletproof—but, if not forced or abused, they tend to keep on working surprisingly accurately, as long as they have not been fiddled with. So look to assembly issues in the first instance, and go from there.
Cheers
Brett