shutterfinger
Member
Youtube videos are the jist of what to do, useful for a tech not familiar for that piece of equipment but familiar with camera repair.
I go for a factory service manual and never watch videos unless trying to clarify for a member posting here.
In your initial post and in post 9 your main concern is the wires. There is no hard rule. The wires are likely 20 to 24 gauge depending on their usage, 20 gauge for power distribution, 22 or 24 gauge for signals/aperture/light meter. In several manuals I have looked at the wires have to be desoldered to access whats under the circuit board or the wires. A 15 watt iron with a pin point tip is the only soldering iron to use. Rosin core solder is the only solder that can be used in electrical work, other types of solder will result in problems.
Wires will develop a curvature pattern from where they have laid for years. There are likely a channel or path in which the wires lay , some will be obvious others not. The wires may be warped with narrow strips of tape to make a bundle. They should never be rubbed by a moving part or pinched by a cover or part that mount over them. Sometimes you have to sit the cover down then push the wires from under the edge of the cover to finish seating it in place. You know you have them correct when they lay flat without twisting or stressing their attach point.
I go for a factory service manual and never watch videos unless trying to clarify for a member posting here.
In your initial post and in post 9 your main concern is the wires. There is no hard rule. The wires are likely 20 to 24 gauge depending on their usage, 20 gauge for power distribution, 22 or 24 gauge for signals/aperture/light meter. In several manuals I have looked at the wires have to be desoldered to access whats under the circuit board or the wires. A 15 watt iron with a pin point tip is the only soldering iron to use. Rosin core solder is the only solder that can be used in electrical work, other types of solder will result in problems.
Wires will develop a curvature pattern from where they have laid for years. There are likely a channel or path in which the wires lay , some will be obvious others not. The wires may be warped with narrow strips of tape to make a bundle. They should never be rubbed by a moving part or pinched by a cover or part that mount over them. Sometimes you have to sit the cover down then push the wires from under the edge of the cover to finish seating it in place. You know you have them correct when they lay flat without twisting or stressing their attach point.