As I mentioned, the camera shop replaced the seals. I feel this is additional residue which has worked its way loose. Unless we're speaking of different seals?Welcome to Photrio!!!
If you look on Ebay there should be foam seals for the camera. It's not a big deal to replace the foam in the mirror box. Someone here should be able to help. Every old SLR suffers from this, shouldn't have an impact on the image.
Cheers!
I'm not familiar with the particular camera. Most likely culprit is particles on the bottom of the focusing screen or lying on the mirror.
I meant that I think what you described is cleaning the focusing screen and surrounding area, not destroying the focusing screen.Yikes, this guy is showing how to destroy a focusing screen. Good lesson.
Yes, but my understanding is that the XG-M has more robust metal construction, which must be nicer tactile experience.Thanks for sharing your story!
I was gifted a Minolta XG-M by a friend a few years ago. I always liked how it handled, but it spent its time in a box in storage until recently. I dug it up, replaced the dead electrolytic capacitor in it (a common problem and fortunately an easy fix), got a few lenses to go with it (it came with a 50/1.8 and a 80-200 zoom I'll probably never use) and have been using it quite a bit lately. It's a lovely little camera! I understand the XG-M is similar to the X-700, although the latter has a Program auto-exposure mode that the XG-M lacks.
which must be nicer tactile experience.
Unless it's freezing outside!
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