Dan Fromm
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- Joined
- Mar 23, 2005
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O-n-F, your example contains a Pacemaker Graphic front standard. The Pacemaker front standard's light trap is a slot that the edge of the stamped sheet metal Pacemaker board slips into.
The OP has a Miniature Speed Graphic, not a 2x3 Pacemaker Speed Graphic. His camera's front standard has a light trap that is a recess the board fits into. No slot, and the board has no lip.
All the OP has to do to adapt a larger camera's lens board to accept a lens on a Mini Graphic board is:
Drill the board to accept the largest rear cell that has to pass through it.
Cut some wood or opaque plastic or metal strips that are as thick as the Mini Speed's board to lengths that will let them be assembled into a square whose inner opening is as large as the Mini board.
Attach them to the target camera's board.
Make two more strips to use as lens board sliders, attach them.
You're right, the OP could indeed sacrifice a Mini front standard. He'll have to beg or buy one. Now do you understand my comment about the corrupting power of found money?
The OP has a Miniature Speed Graphic, not a 2x3 Pacemaker Speed Graphic. His camera's front standard has a light trap that is a recess the board fits into. No slot, and the board has no lip.
All the OP has to do to adapt a larger camera's lens board to accept a lens on a Mini Graphic board is:
Drill the board to accept the largest rear cell that has to pass through it.
Cut some wood or opaque plastic or metal strips that are as thick as the Mini Speed's board to lengths that will let them be assembled into a square whose inner opening is as large as the Mini board.
Attach them to the target camera's board.
Make two more strips to use as lens board sliders, attach them.
You're right, the OP could indeed sacrifice a Mini front standard. He'll have to beg or buy one. Now do you understand my comment about the corrupting power of found money?