Portrait Hawkeye restoration
Got the lens.
First one interesting information:
the lens was actually made by Bausch & Lomb (as i suspected), and was sold as B&L Cephaloscope.
There are very little information about Cephaloscopes, i found that they were made in 14", 16" and 19" focal lengths.
The lens arrived in not-so-good conditions, but i have the hope to recover its full functionality.
First thing, what looks like a metal "cap" is actually a can, probably a very old one. Maybe a bean can
Unfortunately the lens came with no shade, and no flange. I was afraid that the diaphragm leaves were lost as well... more on that later.
Probably the lens was left unused for a very long time, it came with a LOT of oxidization, and all the threads were stuck.
The only good one was the softness control (that has no stop, so it can be unscrewed as much as you like, until the back cell comes loose!).
There are two (very noticeable) dings on both front and back cell rims. Not so extreme to be unrepairable, in my opinion. Fortunately the "cap can" was on when the lens got knocked, so it protected the front ring from being badly bent.
There were two bad news: the second cell (from the back) was stuck, as was the diaphragm ring. The small screws that retain the diaphragm ring assembly were literally covered in greenish oxide, that was probably leaked from the innards of the diaphragm housing long time ago.
I could not see the diaphragm leaves, as the ring was stuck wide open. I could live with the iris stuck wide open, but i had to open the lens somehow: the inner back glass was very dirty, and the affected surface was inside!
When i tried to unscrew the inner back cell, i found that it was stuck hard. Even with a oil filter wrench, and with a rubber hammer, it took a lot of force, and many knockings... but i ended up unscrewing the barrel from just behind the diaphragm assembly!
No way to unlock the lens cell!!
At least i had access to the inner surfaces of front and inner back cell, and i could clean them well. Unfortunately the inner back glass is very bulbous, and i didn't place it on a soft cloth when i was hammering
The paper i placed on the table was not enough to avoid any damage, but the scratching are close to invisible. My goofyness didn't get punished too hard, all in all i have been lucky.
Next step was the stuck diaphragm ring.
I used WD-40, "Svitol" penetrating oil, and "G-20" dry circuit cleaner.
NO WAY.
I tried to unscrew the small screws (those that were submerged in gunk and oxide). I could unscrew four of them, but three of them were stuck, and got damaged. It's a very soft brass, and my watchmaker's screwdriver set is not of the best quality. Another less learned!
Next step: drilling the three damaged screws and remove the diaphragm assembly cover. That would allow to spray some penetrating oil from the inside. All my efforts from the outside were unsuccessful. A lot of spraying and a lot of small rubber hammer knocks didn't make any difference at all. I suspect that the oxide is actually sealing the inside, the diaphragm leaves didn't get any oil on them.
Before any brute force attempt, i'd like to know which other way could be taken.
Now the lens is disassembled in three parts, so i could submerge the diaphragm in a cleaning fluid, without affecting the glasses.
Which one? I have some rectificated petrol (very close to the naphta fluid used for lighters), that i use for shutter cleaning, but i think that its action would be too light for what i'm trying to do.
The liquid should be safe for the diaphragm leaves, that look non-metallic (very thin, and not attracted by a magnetic screwdriver).
I am open to any advice.
Thanks
have fun
CJ