I just bought 2 RB67's from the big auction site. One has a 90mm lens and the other a 180mm lens. I did notice that the camera with the 90mm lens takes a little more effort to cock the shutter than the one that has the 180mm. This may be normal, I'm not sure. Shutter speeds sound OK. The body cocks OK with the lens off and the lens cocks ok when it is off the body. Only seems to bind some when they are together. I'm planning on doing a CLA on them but i haven't worked on these before. Is there a service manual available for these that I can download? Is there anything else I should look at while i'm servicing these two while I'm waiting for the light seals to arrive? Everything on these 2 cameras seems to work but they have been sitting for awhile so I'd rather service them now before loading them and trying to take a few test frames.
Yeah I was thinking I should have swapped the lenses to see if the stiffness followed the lens. I'll have to try that tonight. A fisheye lens would be great, but I wonder how much that'll set me back. Already have light seals on the way. Figured I'd get them first. I wanna load these and go use them!Hi,
If you've never used the RB67 before, you're in for a real treat - a superbly versatile and fun-to-use camera!
I was wondering if the force required to cock the shutter is the same when you swop the lenses? This might indicate the one of the lenses has much more "spring tension". Other than that, I guess it could be many things... lubricant that has dried / become too viscose, etc.
This is a really simple, extremely robust and long-living camera that is difficult to jam up (compared to other waist-level medium format SLRs) - so I wouldn't worry about it too much unless it's too difficult to use comfortably.
Much more important are light leaks in the film back(s), which they are unfortunately prone to.
If you can find a 37mm Fisheye, you'll have more fun that what you dreamt is possible with a medium format camera
Dawid
Thank you!I have sent you the parts manual via email per your request
Jeff
There is an owners manual floating around the web somewhere...
Also have another question. One of the bodies has an adapter in the tripod socket so the grip can attach and the camera can go onto a standard 1/4 20 tripod screw. The other does not, I'm not sure of the size because i haven't measured it yet. My question then is: Where can i get another adapter? And, is it a good idea to put such a heavy camera on a tripod with only a 1/4 20 screw? Last thing i want is for one of these behemoths fall on my foot because the tripod failed!
Ok. Makes sense. I haven't had a tripod or camera that used a tripod socket bigger than 1/4" before. I'll most likely use this on my Bogen tripod with the 3030 head. I'll check and see if they make a 3/8" quick release plate for it.
Thank you very much! This is what i was looking for.A Service manual can be found here: http://rb67.helluin.org/files/2010/02/Mamiya-RB67-Pro-S-Repair-Manual.pdf
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