Or there are people who have written new, alternate "operating systems" to replace the software within the camera.
This is more labourious, i think, that dropping a microcontroller with an ADC and DAC inside a film SLR using an electronic vertical shutter !!!
I still don't get it. Be it mechanical or electrical, as long as you can get the replacement part, you can have your camera fixed, right? What make the electrical is harder?
The huge hurdle to any reverse engineering effort is money.
IC fab houses don't build individual ICs.
They build hundreds or thousands, whatever will fit on one wafer.
And wafers keep getting larger and larger.
Add to that the tooling and setup required for a production run.
Then amortize that over building a single wafer rather than thousands.
A single replacement IC could easily cost more than $10,000.
- Leigh
Spoken with the resolute assurance of a novice.Or... You could replace it with a $5-20 FPGA, microcontroller, or similar chip that you flash to meet your design specs and respond to signals in the manner you want.
cool! but I live in a simple town, where simple repairsmen have screwdrivers to repair cameras; all of that would be impossible, and even if I'd go to the town wher repairsmen have electronic skills this would probably cost far more than buying a new camera!- Incorporate a Temperature compensated log amplifier (in theory the Nikkormat EL already has it inside the circuit). This is done with an opamp, and I think there are modern dedicated ICs that do the specific job.
- Feed the output to an ADC (analog to digital converter) to read the value.
- Feed the ADC's output to the microcontroller
Apparently you learned more in your decade than I did in 5 decades of design work.Yes, a complete novice more with than a decade of robotics and embedded systems development...
Well Berri, you live in the land of cheap cameras then.cool! but I live in a simple town, where simple repairsmen have screwdrivers to repair cameras; all of that would be impossible, and even if I'd go to the town wher repairsmen have electronic skills this would probably cost far more than buying a new camera!
Yes, a complete novice more with than a decade of robotics and embedded systems development...
Where do you get the design specs? Why, you would develop them yourself. Reverse engineering, develop your own from scratch, or find existing open sourced designs. (I've seen a few people online who have design for camera repair stuff, but not many.)
They're cameras, not nuclear reactors.
lucky youere i live in the land of expensive film cameras and very good technicians.
I hope it's not gonna be the land of cheap film too!you live in the land of cheap cameras then.
I hope it's not gonna be the land of cheap film too!
So you suggest that if I'd come where you live with my Nikon F6 with dead electronics you could find someone who is able to make and program a microcontroller that interfaces to my camera and it would work again? how much would that cost? 10K is enough?
Electronic cameras are more complicated to repair and there are more things that could go wrong. Mechanic cameras usually stop working properly for simple reasons; a spring gone out of place, old stale lubricant or things like that. In the case the mechanic shutter breaks it will be very difficult to repair and probably not worth the money. A vintage car is easier to repair than a fully electronic modern one. (I'm not sure how many today's car will be around in the next 50 years)
flavio81 said:In camera electronics the hardest to replace parts are the custom ICs. But at the same time it is very rare to have an IC fail. Unless we apply wrong polarity voltage to it, excess operating voltage, or it dies from substrate failure due to "ungood" manufacturing.
Are there any old farts out there that worked on their cars back in the day? Now it's virtually impossible with computers running cars. It all started with points and condensers getting replaced with electronic ignition.
Been driving BMW for a very long time, the current one is the most computer filled, computer-ridden car with diagnistic reporting. Yes, it might inform you what is 'wrong', but then you have to guess as to the one or two or three things CAUSING the issue. Knowing I have 'excessivly discharge battery' is the reported trouble, but I still need to figure out if it isIt's not impossible. If anything, it is EASIER....
Second, thanks to modern engine control units, just plug a scanner that "talks" to the ECU and it will report you immediately what is wrong with the engine. So diagnostics is easier.
...Car manteinance has not become impossible at all, just different. I contend that (a) it is easier now...
Moreover, for those who think that electronic spare parts can't be manufactured... Nowadays you can replace, if you want, your engine control unit (ECU) with a do-it-yourself ECU, for example the "MegaSquirt" ECU. You build the hardware, the software is already made, then you configure it according to your engine..
Been driving BMW for a very long time, the current one is the most computer filled, computer-ridden car with diagnistic reporting. Yes, it might inform you what is 'wrong', but then you have to guess as to the one or two or three things CAUSING the issue. Knowing I have 'excessivly discharge battery' is the reported trouble, but I still need to figure out if it is
I coulda done all of that even without OBDII report of 'excessively discharged battery'
- bad alternator (no output)
- bad voltage regulator (no output)
- bad battery (simply old, or dead cell)
- bad IBS not sending right commands to cause alternator and VR to output the right voltage to charge the battery
- some electronic module not 'going to sleep' and continuing battery drain all night, for days on end
Car maintenance now is made harder because there is more stuff crammed into the engine compartment now than in a car 50 years ago, so you have to pull out lotsa stuff just to get at what is broken.
I have been driving two samples of the Type C were the engine was going made whilst driving. Making it undrivable in even a dangerous way. The first one spent three weeks at the official Mercedes garage as they did not find the cause.Fortunately other brands are doing much better. Mercedes for example.
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