I recently got a Hasselblad 500C (1966) from a friend for a very good price. When I inspected the camera, I noticed that the focusing screen had been installed incorrectly and rotated.
I’m a fairly experienced precision mechanic, so I carefully removed the four screws, disassembled the screen assembly, and reinstalled everything in what seemed to be the correct order and orientation.
Inside the finder assembly I found the following parts:
a ground glass focusing screen
a line/grid screen
a spring frame
a metal retaining frame
and additionally a ~0.8 mm thick plexiglass spacer
The plexiglass spacer confused me a bit, because I’m not sure if it actually belongs there or if it was added later.
So my questions are:
What is the correct order of these elements in a Hasselblad 500C?
Where should the spacer go, if it belongs there at all? Or should it be removed?
How do you properly adjust the focus afterwards so that the ground glass matches the film plane? Is there a simple trick to check or calibrate it?
Thanks a lot for your help — I really appreciate the knowledge and experience in this forum.
Taping a ground glass on the film gate of the camera back, seeing if the focus point on both glasses agree with a magnifier, using a shallow depth of field lens with a high contrast target, is one way to do it.
If someone put a spacer there they likely did it for a reason (to fix the focus offset). I don't see anything in the service manual that looks like a plexiglass spacer.
I've never touched a Hasselblad, but I have a feeling this spacer was added by someone trying to make the focusing screen more accurate. Do you have a picture of it?
Taping a ground glass on the film gate of the camera back, seeing if the focus point on both glasses agree with a magnifier, using a shallow depth of field lens with a high contrast target, is one way to do it.
If someone put a spacer there they likely did it for a reason (to fix the focus offset). I don't see anything in the service manual that looks like a plexiglass spacer.
Taping a ground-glass is something you can't do with a Hasselblad body, because the magazine is the gate !
You'd need a focussing screen attachment to do this ( ... the type usually used for SWC bodies )
Hi, I have similar issue with 1000F model. I'm looking for proper procedure to install focusing screen with "spring spacer" under it.
Specifically, how to evenly screw 4 screws that determine screen height.
Is you plexiglass spacer (just a thin "frame"on the picture?) looks like simple shim to me.
Recently, they have been using full plexiglass inserts (with pattern similar to fresnel lenses") under regular Hasselblad screen with Fuji Instax film "polaroid" backs, to offset difference in focusing plane. I don't think that is the case with your camera.
This is the newest ground back adapter