Unless I'm wrong the Adox Sport doesn't have any type of rangefinder or other focusing method. You guess the distance and set it on the lens. If setting the lens at 30' give you everything in focus why worry about where the infinity mark? Never understand why people worry so much about a camera lens infinity marks not aligning with infinity. However it's highly unlikely that there is an issue with the lens. Are the struts firmly locking in place, not bent, bed fully down, etc.
Glad you got it figured out (I was no help -) I thought from your original post that it focused correctly except when set at infinity.
If the shutter block was removed and reinstalled, probably a good chance that a spacer is missing or bent or out of position. This will mess up the aperture dial. Some day, probably after your trip, you can try loosening the shutter block from the inside back of the lens board. Get it slightly loose, give it all a jiggle. While loose, see if the aperture dial is moving easier. On most shutters, the aperture lever is part of a large disk on the very back of the shutter- you might see the edge of this disk at the back of the shutter when installed. Serious binding is often from external pressure on this back disk, not from internal issues.
I'd use the camera for a bit. When you are up for it, you can remove the shutter block, reset the spacers and unjam the aperture dial. But then you are in for resetting infinity on the lens, and you've done enough of that for now! Once you spend some time with 6x9 negatives you'll possibly do this on a winter evening.
The YashicaMat screen is two pieces. A Fresnel plastic lower piece and a ground glass upper piece. The actual image you use to focus is on the gorund glass surface. If you had the plastic in there, you would be very off as the thickness of the plastic sets the image plane off of the proper surface.I was just wondering if you have any thoughts on ground glass for checking focus - I can get another piece of ground glass that would fit the camera for around £18 but I have just seen my local camera shop has a marked Split image Rolleiflex focusing screen for just £10 which seems like it could be even better for checking focus is accurate - I'm guessing I would be good to use this provided it fits the film rails alright?
The only issue with these screens it seems is that you cant always use a loupe to check focus with them as they're too thick (or at least I had that issue when trying to check focus with my Yashica Mat fresnel focus screen before I broke it ), but I guess I can always use a macro lens and a digital camera to zoom in on it instead - the split image seems like a very useful thing to have!
The YashicaMat screen is two pieces. A Fresnel plastic lower piece and a ground glass upper piece. The actual image you use to focus is on the gorund glass surface. If you had the plastic in there, you would be very off as the thickness of the plastic sets the image plane off of the proper surface.
The Rollei screen will have the focus plane and the bottom side of the screen on the same surface. But you will need to trim it down most likely- later Rollei screens are larger than the width of a 6x6 or 6x9 image.
I've tried differnt focus aids for setting infinity. I seem to keep coming back to plain ground glass. John Koehrer's suggestion to make your own is as good as any source.
Howz about glass from a thrift store picture frame & grind it yourself,
It's not difficult at all. Maybe with 1000 grit or finer wet or dry sandpaper
If the shutter block was removed and reinstalled, probably a good chance that a spacer is missing or bent or out of position. This will mess up the aperture dial. Some day, probably after your trip, you can try loosening the shutter block from the inside back of the lens board. Get it slightly loose, give it all a jiggle. While loose, see if the aperture dial is moving easier. On most shutters, the aperture lever is part of a large disk on the very back of the shutter- you might see the edge of this disk at the back of the shutter when installed. Serious binding is often from external pressure on this back disk, not from internal issues.
I'd use the camera for a bit. When you are up for it, you can remove the shutter block, reset the spacers and unjam the aperture dial. But then you are in for resetting infinity on the lens, and you've done enough of that for now! Once you spend some time with 6x9 negatives you'll possibly do this on a winter evening.
(Sorry, away from computers for a bit). I would clean it off with a degreaser like alcohol or naphtha and leave it clean. THe gunk you saw was probably someone in the past thinking that dripping oil in there was a good idea, which it isn't. Every setup I have seen leaves this aperture ring clean of lubrication. It should move freely due to assembly, not due to lubrication.
You'll notice that the ring sits slightly below the inner ring which is the shutter body itself. If there are shims or washers between the shutter and the lens board, put the smaller diameter ones next to the shutter so that they sit on the inner ring and not overlap into the aperture ring area. Unless they are stiff metal. Also check the lens board for any ridges or lips that could bind.
Remember of course adding a washer will change your focus again, maybe why it was out in the first place if it was missing. Adding a thin washer or two would probably have been the best way to reset the focus issue assuming the lens itself had not been altered.No worries at all! Thank you for your reply
I think you're right about the washer situation - I think I've found the issue. The reason the aperture selector is binding is the outer part of the selector (that sticks out so you can move it) is currently scraping along the edge of the lens board, which has raised edges. You can just make out the scratch mark that the selector dial makes along this raised edge in the photo attached.
I'm assuming that at some point there was a washer that went between the shutter and lens board as you said - on the lens board are two cutouts on the inner circle that I'm thinking must have locked the washer in place originally, as at the moment they dont lock into any part of the shutter when its mounted and seem to serve no purpose at all.
At the moment it seems I have three options:
1) Sand down the part of the edge of the lens board that is binding to the selector.
2) Find or make a washer so that the selector clears the edge of the lens board - Not quite sure how to go about this though
3) Return the Camera as I am pretty sure the seller must have lost the washer when he removed the lens to use on his DSLR, or it was missing in the first place. Either way, I'm fairly sure the camera is missing a crucial part as I cant see how this works without a washer involved - the cutouts seem to point towards one too.
Would love to hear your thoughts on how I should proceed!
Many thanks
Attachments
Remember of course adding a washer will change your focus again, maybe why it was out in the first place if it was missing. Adding a thin washer or two would probably have been the best way to reset the focus issue assuming the lens itself had not been altered.
Oh definitely - I plan on recalibrating everything again once I've sorted this.
As for the washer that may be the case, although there was no way for me see the washer was missing initially so adjusting the front cell by a couple twists was the best route - the cell only rotates a small amount given the amount of thread so there is plenty of room for adjustment.
Focus isn't really the issue at the moment, it's very easy to adjust with the camera-collimator method (which is unbelievably precise as you're able to zoom right in with a digital camera, much better than ground glass imo if you have the option) and my last two rolls were sharp at all distances - just need to sort this selector switch out as otherwise it's a two-hand job to change apertures at lower values
That's what I would do - add a washer or shim of some sort cut from thin (.002") or so plastic, paper, foil or such to free the iris, then re-set the front cell using either of you methods as before. If it's a bit difficult cutting out a full circle just use three small pieces, sticking them to one side (just on that inner ring) with a tiny touch of grease while re-assembling.
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