GregT. said:Yep, probably oil on the aperture blades. Very good lens otherwise, but for some reason its prone to oil settling on the aperture blades.
When it happens to me, I put the lens on one of my F1s, rotate the Aperture Ring to f:/32 and then depress the Multi-Function Lever as if manually stopping down to check depth of field. I repeat this a number of times in succession and eventually the blades respond by opening and closing as they should. Maybe not a permanent fix, but worth a try.
Taking the lens apart myself is a sure prescription for screwing it up permanently (too many thumbs.) One of these days I'll have to look into the cost of cleaning and adjusting. In the meantime, I exercise the aperture blades frequently as I described above.
Mike Kennedy said:Try applying lighter fluid on Q-tip ends. Lightly dip the QT in a bottle cap worth of lighter fluid or naptha and EVEN SOFTER dab the shutter blades.
Use a bulb air blower to dry. Repeat/repeat/repeat.........and keep working the aperture button.
Anything that might cure a shutter blade problem without dismantling the lens is your best course of action.
This has worked for me for 7 out of 10 misfunctioning lenses.
Good Luck,
Mike
TomWB said:I notice there is a lot of oil in there, so will be taking it apart, following David's advice.
Hi Greg. The above works, do it all the time when I buy a 'Junker'. Working on a Jupiter 8 and spare 24-48 S1 as we speak. Your particular lens is not that hard to dismantle (reading from Rick's page) just do as Mike says and take lots of pics (Digi of course) and make lots of notes. If the galss is as you say then the lens is worth the hassle. Once you've done this lens you can progress to a Lomo Cosmic Symbol. You think I jest? Wait till you take the leaf apart! Take care.Mike Kennedy said:Try applying lighter fluid on Q-tip ends. Lightly dip the QT in a bottle cap worth of lighter fluid or naptha and EVEN SOFTER dab the shutter blades.
Use a bulb air blower to dry. Repeat/repeat/repeat.........and keep working the aperture button.
Anything that might cure a shutter blade problem without dismantling the lens is your best course of action.
This has worked for me for 7 out of 10 misfunctioning lenses.
Good Luck,
Mike
GregT. said:You might find reviewing this diagram useful before jumping in...granted its for a 50mm f:/1.4 but should give you at least an idea of what to expect:
http://rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-161.html
Good luck.
EDIT: The drawing is from Rick Oleson's Tech Notes Page at http://rick_oleson.tripod.com/index-27.html
GregT. said:Tom,
I'm guessing you're already familiar with Christian Rollinger's Canon FD Documentation Project. If not, click on "enter" at the bottom of the page at Dead Link Removed.
Greg in Gig Harbor
TomWB said:...are you documenting the construction of the new Narrows Bridge?...
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